It looks a lot like the NB and PEI plans from yesterday, save with the extra steps of exiting restrictions from the current outbreak.
Probably the biggest surprise was re-opening schools outside of the current outbreak zones in Halifax and Sydney.
Hopefully the outbreaks in those areas can wind down and they can join the rest of the province.
Restrictions in NS are scheduled to start lifting next Wednesday, with more outdoor options becoming available for most businesses.
You can see the entire pandemic timeline for the Atlantic region and surrounding area in the animation.
Each tick is a week since the start of the pandemic in March of last year.
Vaccine Roll-Out Metrics
1st graph shows how many days since each province had enough doses to cover their current usage.
2nd graph shows percent of eligible population that is newly vaccinated each day
3rd graph shows days ahead/behind versus national average
This animation shows each province's vaccination pace as a percent of the pace they need to each 80% first dose coverage by the end of June (based on how many they have already vaccinated and how much time is left).
Older data becomes less visible over time.
Here is the current percent of the eligible population of each province covered by at least one vaccine dose (Territories shown in the 2nd graph).
Graph shows actual first dose coverage (blue) compared to a charitable maximum (green) that accounts for previously given 2nd doses and gives a 5-day grace period on deliveries.
Provinces are sorted from smallest (good) to largest (bad) gap between actual/potential coverage.
Nightly quick look at how the rest of the country is doing.
Manitoba may have finally joined the cool kids club and hit it's peak cases.
NS continues to chase Quebec down to the bottom of the chart.
That's it for tonight's update.
(yes, I fell asleep part way though)
Take care of one another an have a great rest of the night.
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For all the graphs, I have the national range in the background in grey: the bottom is the lowest per capita rate by any health region and the top is the highest per capita rate.
Quick thread on vaccines, outbreaks, and why *who* is vaccinated as much as how many (although both are very important)
There's a pre-print out that gives estimates (based on sero-prevalence) of the probability of needing to go to the hospital or dying if infected with SARS-CoV-2 for a series of age brackets: medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
If you know a population's age structure, you can somewhat estimate what an outbreak of a given number of infections will look like in terms of number of hospitalizations and deaths.
And if you know vaccine coverage, you can update those estimates for those effects, too.