Windsor

Windsor-Essex sees 70 new COVID-19 cases, biggest rise in a month, and 1 death

A day after seeing the lowest COVID-19 case count since late March, Windsor and Essex County reported the southwestern Ontario region's biggest daily uptick in cases in nearly a month.

Woman in her 70s died of COVID-19 on Tuesday, public health says

Dr. Wajid Ahmed, medical officer of health for Windsor-Essex who is shown March 29, reiterated Wednesday it's important to continue to follow public health measures. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC)

A day after reporting the lowest COVID-19 case increase since late March, health officials for Windsor and Essex County reported the biggest daily uptick in nearly a month.

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit (WECHU) said Wednesday that 70 more residents have recently tested positive for COVID-19, compared with 16 on Tuesday.

According to Dr. Wajid Ahmed, medical officer of health, the sudden increase was not due to any known delay in receiving testing data.

"Some of these things that we are seeing, it could be a result of a gathering or an event that we still have to investigate," he said, adding the health unit is coming across "information gaps" in cases.

"Maybe people are not sharing all of the information or everything that they have done."

The health unit also announced COVID-19 has claimed another life in Windsor-Essex: a woman in her 70s who lived in the community. Officials could not comment on whether she had received a vaccine.

She is the 422nd person to die after being diagnosed with COVID-19 in Windsor-Essex since the pandemic began.

As of Wednesday's update, 61.5 per cent of adults in Windsor-Essex, or 209,440 people, have received at least one dose of a vaccine.

The day before, the health unit opened up vaccination appointments to all adults, as well as essential workers 16 and up and people 12 and over with some health conditions. Appointments can be booked at WEvax.ca

Ahmed gave a reminder that public health measures must be followed, even by anyone who has received one or two shots. Currently, it's not definitively known whether people who are vaccinated are able to transmit the virus, he said.

"We have to learn more from the real-world data to understand it better."

Overall, 358 known COVID-19 cases were active locally. Of the new cases announced Wednesday, 25 were close contacts of previously confirmed cases, 13 were community acquired, two were outbreak related and 30 were under investigation.

The Southwest Detention Centre remains in outbreak, and nine outbreaks are ongoing at workplaces:

  • Four in Windsor's health-care and social assistance sector.
  • One in Lakeshore's health-care and social assistance sector.
  • Two in Windsor's manufacturing sector.
  • One in Windsor's mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector.
  • One in a retail setting in Windsor.

COVID-19 in Sarnia-Lambton, Chatham-Kent

On Wednesday, health officials in Sarnia-Lambton reported 16 new cases of COVID-19, though the active case count, at 71, has fallen by two cases since Tuesday.

Chatham-Kent Public Health reported four new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, with 37 cases active overall.

One more person living in the municipality has died due to COVID-19, bringing the pandemic death toll to 14.

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