There were 31 new cases reported in the region today: 4 in Newfounland and Labrador and 27 in New Brunswick.
There are now 339 known, active cases in the region.
There was no update for PEI today, leaving them with 6 known, active cases.
NFLD reported 4 new cases today, all in the province's Eastern zone.
1 is related to travel and the other 3 are close contacts of the case reported yesterday (still under investigation). Public health describes this as 'worrisome'.
There are now 9 known, active cases in NFLD.
NB reported 27 new cases today: 2 in Saint John, 11 in Moncton, and 14 in Edmundston.
Edmundston remains on lockdown and Moncton in Red restriction status.
There are now 313 known, active cases in NB.
Here's the updated zoom-in on NB/Edmundston.
NS reported no new cases today (the only correct number to report).
There are now 11 known, active cases in NS.
Here you can see the full timeline for the pandemic in the Atlantic region.
Here you can see a summary of each province and territory's vaccine roll-out. Top line is doses distributed, bottom is doses administered. The shaded are are doses in storage. All scaled to population. National average shown in black lines.
How is your province doing?
And lastly, there are the usual vaccine roll-out metrics. First graph is usage rate for recently distributed doses (last two weeks).
2nd graph is how many days behind the national average vaccination rate each province is.
Ok, back to work.
Have a great night!
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
I've got a few minutes while dinner is still cooking before I start work again.
Let's talk about vaccine distribution.
I post some version of this graph every day. Solid line is doses distributed to the province, dashed are doses administered. Shade is the difference. Easy.
Here's Ontario for comparison.
From this one graph, you can get a quick sense of how much a province *can* vaccinate and how quickly it *is* vaccinating given that constraint.
But there's bunch of information trapped in that shaded area. (Argh! Trapped data!)
The two SARS-CoV-2 vaccines currently in circulation are Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna.
They are both 2-dose mRNA vaccines. You get one dose and then the 2nd a set number of weeks later. After ~10 days you're at 95% lower risk of developing symptoms (hurray!).