Thursday, 17 June 2021

Ontario: Is it Requiem for the Pandemic ?

 

Well the news in Ontario has improved dramatically on the pandemic front.  Daily case numbers today were 370 – down from over 2,000 a month ago.  Daily deaths have also been falling.  If one takes a look at the daily case counts since the start of the pandemic in late January of 2020, it looks like that the third wave is definitely on the way out.  Ontario (See Figure 1) had three waves each worse than the other.  The first wave now looks relatively minor compared to the second one which peaked in early January of 2021 and the third wave which peaked in mid-April of 2021.  

 


 

 

While the steep decline can be attributed to the lengthy lockdown and the rising vaccination rates (as of today 76% of Ontarians aged 18 plus have received a first shot and almost 20% have had two shots) there is also the effect of seasonality. Much like last summer, warmer weather and more people being outdoors has helped slow transmission.  Note that the second wave peaked in early winter and the drop was not as pronounced as what we are experiencing currently because we are mainly indoors in the December to March period of the year. As for the lengthy protracted lockdowns, it will be interesting to see what the retrospective analysis will be like on their actual effectiveness.

 

Of course, data will be a challenge and as we all know in Canada data on the pandemic from the outset  has been less than optimal. Governments at both the federal and provincial level are hoping to declare victory and move on hoping that we all forget the chaos of coordination of data, response and most recently vaccine distribution.  Trying to snag a vaccine appointment in a decentralized and chaotic system has made the process a veritable rodeo.  It will be tempting to shrug one’s shoulders and move on, but the most important lesson of the pandemic is to learn from the pandemic. If we simply do what we did in the wake of SARS two decades ago - study, plan and ignore -  what is the point? 

 

As for Thunder Bay District, Figure 2 illustrates that after the initial onset of the pandemic in spring of 2020 which produced a very small first wave, we had a long period of relative inactivity until mid-November of 2020 when our second wave began, and it never really ended until recently.  We had a long second wave that peaked in early March of 2021 and then began to decline and bottomed out in mid-April.  We have not gone to zero cases but have instead since mid-April been averaging 5 to 6 cases daily.  Our active case count is down and in recent days most of the cases have been outside the City of Thunder Bay, but the infection is still there percolating quietly.  

 


 

 

So, is this it? Is the pandemic over?  With rising vaccination rates, it is tempting to see this as the last wave.  However, there are caveats.  Full vaccinations need to continue to rise as herd immunity requires anywhere from 75 to 85 percent of the population getting two doses. However, even once fully vaccinated, it does not mean that new variants might not come along that can overcome vaccines.  And there will be no doubt a need for boosters at some point.  In addition, the steep decline is a function of the warmer weather and the real test will come this fall.  In the before time, the return to indoor activity in September was always marked by a resurgence of colds and flus and asthma with a peak usually hitting the third week of September.  If reasonable precautions such as continued masking are maintained, this should not be a problem. Still, it will be difficult to sort out colds from flus from COVID this fall. While things should be much more normal, it will probably not be as normal as we would like.