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Ontario reports lowest increase of COVID-19 cases since March 30

Public Health Ontario confirmed 287 new COVID-19 cases today, which is a 1.1 per cent increase in the total number of cases reported to-date
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Public Health Ontario is reporting 287 new cases of COVID-19 this morning, which is the lowest daily increase reported by the province in nearly two months. 

The last time the province saw a lower daily case increase was March 30, when there were 260 new lab-confirmed cases reported. 

On May 10, the province reported 294 new cases. May 14, Ontario reported 258 new cases, but announced on May 15, there were 87 cases missed in the May 14 report, bringing the day's total up to 345. 

The province is coming off a seven-day streak of daily case increases from 390 to 460. 

In total, Ontario has reported 26,191 lab-confirmed cases of COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. Of those, 19,958 people have recovered (including 260 new recoveries reported today), which is about 76 per cent of the total number of cases. 

There have also been 2,123 deaths attributed to the virus, including 21 reported by the province today. 

The latest victims were nine people between the ages of 60 and 79, and 12 people over the age of 80. 

There are currently 848 people hospitalized in Ontario with COVID-19, including 143 people in intensive care and 113 patients on ventilators. 

Since yesterday’s report, there have been 9,875 tests completed, and there are 6,961 tests awaiting results. 

According to the provincial government, Ontario has the capacity to complete nearly 25,000 tests in a day. 

Premier Doug Ford said the province is rolling out a new testing strategy this week and anyone who wants a COVID-19 test will be able to get one, regardless of whether they have symptoms of the coronavirus. 

On April 30, the province reported more than 19,000 tests processed in a single day. 

For the week of May 3 to 9, daily testing ranged from 10,000 to 19,000 tests processed per day. 

For the week of May 10 to 16, the total ranged from 12,000 to 18,000 tests processed per day. 

Last week testing declined with a range of 5,800 to 11,000  tests processed per day between May 18 and 23. The report on May 17, noted there were 16,000 tests processed. This Sunday’s report, May 24, noted there were 11,000 tests processed. 

The Ministry of Long-Term Care reports there are 150 active outbreaks in long-term care homes in the province with 1,855 active cases in residents and 1,335 active cases in staff. The ministry has reported 1,538 deaths of residents and six staff deaths as a result of COVID-19. 

As of May 25, the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit has confirmed 454 cases of COVID-19 in Simcoe Muskoka. The health unit reports 340 of those people have now recovered (75 per cent). There are no longer any active cases in the Muskoka part of the region.

Thirty-six people in the Simcoe-Muskoka region have died with COVID-19, including 23 long-term care residents living at Owen Hill Care Community and Bradford Valley Care Community. 

There are now eight Simcoe County residents hospitalized with COVID-19. 

The case breakdown by municipality, according to the health unit, is as follows: 

Barrie (147 cases, 108 recoveries, 14 deaths, 1 in hospital), Bradford West Gwillimbury (98 cases, 74 recoveries, 12 deaths, 2 in hospital), New Tecumseth (46 cases, 30 recoveries, 2 in hospital, one death), Orillia (17 cases, 13 recoveries, 2 deaths, one in hospital), Collingwood (15 cases, 11 recoveries), Wasaga Beach (13 cases, 10 recoveries, one death), Clearview (7 cases, 6 recoveries, one death), Innisfil (34 cases, 27 recoveries, one in hospital), Springwater (8 cases, 7 recoveries, 1 death), Midland (6 cases, all recovered), Oro-Medonte (5 cases, 2 recoveries, 2 deaths, one in hospital), Adjala-Tosorontio (7 cases, all recovered), Essa (11 cases, 7 recoveries, 1 death), Ramara (7 cases, 4 recoveries), Tiny (3 cases, 2 recoveries), Tay (5 cases, 3 recoveries, 1 in hospital), Penetanguishene (3 cases, 2 recoveries), and Severn (3 cases, all recovered).

The case rate (including lab-confirmed cases only) for the Simcoe-Muskoka region is 75.1 cases per 100,000 population. The provincial average is 176.2 cases per 100,000 population.


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Erika Engel

About the Author: Erika Engel

Erika regularly covers all things news in Collingwood as a reporter and editor. She has 15 years of experience as a local journalist
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