Greater Toronto - The proportion of cases (positive test results) resulting in death (yellow line).
Greater Toronto cases, hospitalizations, deaths.
City of Toronto - The proportion of cases (positive test results) resulting in death (yellow line).
City of Toronto cases, hospitalizations, deaths.
GTA cases, hospitalizations, and deaths, indexed to values 1 year earlier. The black line (index = 100) is where we were 365 days ago (all values indexed to values on that date).
(Below black bar = lower than one year ago today; Above black bar = higher than one year ago today)
2020/2021 seasonal comparison: Ontario and Québec covid-19 cases.
This is an index chart in which daily values are displayed proportionate to their values on April 1 of the respective year (2020 or 2021). (Above black bar = higher than April 1 values.)
2020/2021 seasonal comparison: Ontario and Québec covid-19 deaths.
This is an index chart in which daily values are displayed proportionate to their values on April 1 of the respective year (2020 or 2021). (Above black bar = higher than April 1 values.)
2020/2021 seasonal comparison: Ontario and Québec covid-19 hospitalizations.
This is an index chart in which daily values are displayed proportionate to their values on April 1 of the respective year (2020 or 2021). (Above black bar = higher than April 1 values.)
Ontario - The proportion of cases (positive test results) resulting in death (yellow line). (Daily reported deaths divided by average daily cases over prior 28 days.)
Weekly all-cause deaths and deaths with/from Covid-19 in Ontario, 2010-2021 (subject to Statistics Canada reporting delay for all-cause deaths.)
Here we have the total number of deaths in Canada and its regions over the past ten years.
Here we have the same chart you saw above now expressed as a rate per 100,000 people. Generally, a flatter trend in death rates would suggest that population growth may be a key factor driving growth in total deaths.
Looking at the past decade nationally, we see that it's natural for deaths in one year to exceed deaths in the previous year (blue line > 0%). Note that a year of low or negative growth is often followed by a year of much higher growth.