19 new cases were reported in the region today: 8 in Nova Scotia and 11 in New Brunswick.
All but one was successfully traced at the time of reporting (part of the Edmundston outbreak).
There are now 219 known, active cases in Atlantic Canada.
PEI didn't update their numbers today, leaving them with 7 known, active cases.
NL also did not update their numbers today, which leaves them with 18 known, active cases.
NB reported 11 new cases today:
1 in Moncton (close contact)
3 in Saint John (1 travel and 2 close contacts)
7 in Edmundston (5 close contacts, 1 travel, and 1 still under investigation)
There are now 150 known, active cases in NB.
Updated restrictions/case level map and case timeline with the Edmundston region emphasized.
Pretty good week for contact tracing in NB.
NS reported 8 new cases today:
1 in the Western zone (travel related)
5 in the Eastern zone (4 travel and 1 close contact)
2 in the Halifax area (1 travel and 1 close contact)
There are now 44 known, active cases in NS.
Here's what the region looks like today. Basically everything shaded in the Atlantic region that's not Edmundston is travel related (and close contacts thereof)
Absolutely wild the volume of travel cases we're getting from the rest of the country right now
Hurray for quarantine
You can see the entire pandemic timeline for the Atlantic region and surrounding areas in this animation.
Each tick is a week since the beginning of March last year.
Vaccine Roll-Out Ribbon Graphs.
Top of the ribbon is doses per capita distributed, bottom is doses used.
Vaccine Roll-Out Metrics
By a hair, NS is currently the fastest* vaccinating province.
*This position changes constantly but NS has historically been the slowest, so it's a bit of a big deal
Here's the pacing graph. Most are approaching a solid pace for hitting target.
Here is the percent of the eligible population of each province covered by at least one dose (Territories in the 2nd graph).
I'm not going to type out the vaccination percentages on my phone because it would be annoying.
If twitter stops sucking I'll cover test data tomorrow and update my national maps too.
Have a great rest of the night!
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30 new cases were reported in the region today: 3 each in PEI and Newfoundland and Labrador, 9 in New Brunswick, and 15 in Nova Scotia.
25/30 were traced at the time of reporting.
There are now 259 known, active cases in Atlantic Canada.
PEI reported 3 new cases today, all related to travel.
Due to the large number or travel-related cases, PEI has announced that effective immediately it is closing borders to non-resident travelers from outside the Atlantic region
There are now 13 known, active cases in PEI.
NL reported 3 new cases as well: 1 travel-related case in the Eastern health region and 2 in the Western region (one travel-related and 1 close contact of an existing case).
Cases up in most of Canada, with several provinces having case rates similar to or exceeding those seen in the US (Alberta is 11th, Ontario 14th, Saskatchewan 17th, BC 23rd, Quebec 26th.
You can see the geographic distribution (by US Census region) of cases across the entire pandemic timeline in this animation.
Here's the equivalent animation for deaths per capita.
NB reported 9 new cases today: 2 in Saint John (both still under investigation) and 7 in Edmundston (5 close contacts of existing cases and 2 under investigation).
Maine is becoming a dumpster fire again, so mass testing in communities along the border is prudent.
153 active.
Not to leave out Quebec, which is also becoming a dumpster fire.
Actually I can do the map manually.
Testing along the border would be great, I say to no one in particular.