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COVID-19 Update for April 18: 345,126 Vaccines Administered, 289 New Cases, 205 Recoveries, One New Death

Released on April 18, 2021

Vaccines Reported

An additional 11,063 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been given in Saskatchewan, bringing the total number of vaccines administered in the province to 345,126.  

The 11,063 doses of COVID-19 vaccine reported today were administered to residents living in the following regions: Far North West (28), Far North Central (9), Far North East (58), North West (638), North Central (925), North East (170), Saskatoon (3,003), Central West (129), Central East (766), Regina (2,624), South West (203), South Central (1,270) and South East (997).  There were 243 doses administered with zone of residence pending.

Forty-nine per cent of Saskatchewan residents age 40+ have received their first dose:

Status of Priority Population Vaccinations, as of April 17, 2021
Group Estimated 
Population
Received 
First Dose
Received 
Second Dose
Age 80+ 51,307 43,813 (85%) 12,108 (24%)
Age 70-79 79,818 65,006 (81%) 5,229 (7%)
Age 60-69 138,471 89,515 (65%) 4,868 (4%)
Age 50-59 147,466 55,352 (38%) 6,137 (4%)
Age 40-49 151,896 22,464 (15%) 5,317 (4%)

Phase 1 health care workers

(includes LTC and PCH staff)

40,500 28,625 (71%) 18,490 (46%)

All vaccine administration details for the province, including first and second doses, can be found on the dashboard at https://dashboard.saskatchewan.ca/health-wellness.  As the source database for vaccine information, Panorama is subject to continuous data updates which may result in revised counts, day over day.

The Ministry of Health has been informed of a reduction in the April 26 Moderna shipment. Saskatchewan's allocation has been reduced by 47 per cent, from 35,800 doses to 18,800 doses.  The Ministry is working with the Saskatchewan Health Authority and Indigenous Services Canada to determine the potential impact this reduction could have on booked appointments, and the pharmacy vaccination pilot project, and will have an update in the coming days.

Vaccination Booking System Open to Ages 48+ 

In an effort to continue to protect residents as quickly as possible, the eligible age for booking vaccination appointments online or by telephone has been lowered to 48 years.  

Appointments can be made online at www.saskatchewan.ca/COVID19.  People who do not have a cell phone or email account or need assistance can book by calling 1-833-SaskVax (1-833-727-5829).

Additional information on how to book your appointment is available at www.saskatchewan.ca/covid19-vaccine-booking.

Drive-Thru Vaccination Clinics Open to 48-54 Years 

All drive-thru and walk-in COVID-19 vaccination clinics are available to residents aged 48-54 years.

Vaccine supply remains limited and drive-thru/walk-in clinics may close early when all vaccine is administered.

The drive-thru immunization clinic in Regina has now used up its supply of vaccine and has temporarily closed.  Unless there is an unexpected increase in available vaccine supply, the Regina drive-thru clinic is not anticipated to re-open until May 2.

For further information on drive-thru clinics in the province, including hours of operation and wait times, see www.saskhealthauthority.ca/news/service-alerts-emergency-events/Pages/COVID-19-Vaccine-Drive-Thru-Wait-Times.aspx.

Daily COVID-19 Statistics

There are 289 new cases of COVID-19 to report in Saskatchewan on April 18, bringing the provincial total to 38,160 cases.  One (1) case with pending residence information was reassigned to the South East.  Five (5) cases were found to be out-of-province residents and were removed from the Central West (1), Central East (1) and Saskatoon (2) zones, and cases with pending residence information (1).  Three (3) cases not previously reported were added to the Saskatoon zone (2) and cases with pending residence information (1).

There is one (1) new death reported in the 50 to 59 age group in the North Central zone.

The new cases are located in the Far North West (9), Far North East (2), North West (21), North Central (12), North East (2), Saskatoon (32), Central West (7), Central East (26), Regina (106), South West (6), South Central (15) and South East (41) zones. Ten (10) new cases have pending residence information.

There are a total of 34,953 recoveries and 2,742 cases are considered active.

One hundred and eighty-nine (189) people are in hospital.  One hundred and forty-four (144) people are receiving inpatient care: Far North West (1), Far North East (1), North West (4), North Central (7), North East (1), Saskatoon (42), Central East (8), Regina (66), South West (1), South Central (6) and South East (7).  Forty-five (45) people are in intensive care: North Central (2), Saskatoon (10), Central East (1), Regina (30) and South Central (2).

The 7-day average of new COVID-19 case number was 261 (21.3 new cases per 100,000).  A chart comparing today's average to data collected over the past several months is available on the Government of Saskatchewan website at https://dashboard.saskatchewan.ca/health-wellness/covid-19/seven-day-average-of-new-covid-cases.

There were 3,623 COVID-19 tests processed in Saskatchewan on April 17, 2021.

To date, 728,491 COVID-19 tests have been processed in Saskatchewan.   As of April 16, 2021, when other provincial and national numbers were available, Saskatchewan's per capita rate was 610,828 tests performed per million population.  The national rate was 784, 188 tests performed per million population.

As of April 17, 4,664 variants of concern have been identified by screening in Saskatchewan, reported in the Far North West (24), Far North East (2), North West (66), North Central (55), North East (6), Saskatoon (441), Central West (59), Central East (168), Regina (2,857), South West (103), South Central (379) and South East (452) zones.  There are 52 cases with residence pending.

These were previously reported as "presumptive positives," but all screening tests will be considered confirmed VOCs for the purposes of public reporting and contact investigations.

There are 206 new lineage results being reported today.  Of the 1,918 VOCs with lineages identified by whole genome sequencing in Saskatchewan, 1,909  are B.1.1.1.7 (UK) and nine are B.1.351 (SA).  The Regina zone accounts for 1,411 (74 per cent) of the VOC cases with confirmed lineage reported in Saskatchewan.

Please note that these VOCs may have been initially identified via means other than screening (i.e. selection for whole genome sequencing without screening) and that whole genome sequencing results to identify lineage are included in the screening results.

Confirmed variant of concern cases may appear in both columns on the website, depending on testing for that case.  Adding the cases identified by screening and those that have received whole genome sequencing may result in double-counting individual cases.  

Further statistics on the total number of cases among healthcare workers, breakdowns of total cases by source of infection, age, sex and region, total tests to date, per capita testing rate and current numbers of confirmed variants of concern can be found at http://www.saskatchewan.ca/covid19-cases.

Public Health Measures

Due to increased COVID-19 transmission risk in Saskatchewan, the Chief Medical Health Officer announced amendments to the Public Health Order.

Effective April 13, household bubbles are limited to immediate household members only for all of Saskatchewan.  Persons who live alone and single parents of minor children are permitted to meet with one consistent household of less than five individuals.  Co-parenting arrangements are permitted to continue.  Caregivers, support personnel and tradespersons who are not a member of the household are not included in the maximum number of people allowed in that household.

The new Public Health Order also includes limits on worship gathering sizes to allow no more than 30 people effective.

Full details on current public health measures, including the additional measures in effect for Regina and area, can be found at www.saskatchewan.ca/covid19-measures.

These Public Health Order measures are in effect until April 26 and will be reviewed at that time.

Residents are also urged to adhere to best personal protective measures:

  • Wear your mask in all public places including all workplaces
  • Wash non-medical masks daily
  • Maintain physical distancing
  • Wash your hands frequently
  • Reduce activities outside of your home.  Order take-out or curbside pick-up.  If you are able to work from home, work from home at this time.
  • Avoid all unnecessary travel throughout the province at this time

If you have any symptoms, stay home and arrange for a COVID-19 test.  If anyone in your home has symptoms, the entire household should remain home until the test results are known.  Testing information is available at www.saskatchewan.ca/government/health-care-administration-and-provider-resources/treatment-procedures-and-guidelines/emerging-public-health-issues/2019-novel-coronavirus/testing-information.

General COVID-19 Information

General public inquiries may be directed to COVID19@health.gov.sk.ca.

Know your risk.  Keep yourself and others safe: www.saskatchewan.ca/government/health-care-administration-and-provider-resources/treatment-procedures-and-guidelines/emerging-public-health-issues/2019-novel-coronavirus/about-covid-19/know-your-risk.

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For more information, contact:

Health
Regina
Phone: 306-787-4083
Email: media@health.gov.sk.ca

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