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Hundreds gather in Simcoe parking lot to protest lockdown
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Hundreds gather in Simcoe parking lot to protest lockdown
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At Cortellucci Vaughan Hospital it s all COVID-19, all the time
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Published Thursday, April 8, 2021 6:52PM EDT TORONTO - An expert group is recommending Ontario clinicians ration doses of a
drug used to treat COVID-19 as a supply shortage coincides with a third wave of infections that s sending more patients into intensive care. The scientists advising the province on the pandemic published revised clinical guidelines this week reflecting the shortage of tocilizumab, an anti-inflammatory
drug approved in Canada to treat arthritis. A March report from the group found the
drug reduced COVID-19 patients need for mechanical ventilation and improved chances of survival. The COVID-19 science advisory table recommends the
drug for critically and moderately ill patients and previously said a second dose could be considered after 24 hours if a patient didn t improve. This week, its guidance was updated to recommend a fixed dose of 400 milligrams per patient and no second dose.
Posted: Apr 08, 2021 11:15 PM ET | Last Updated: April 9
ICU health-care worker Jannikka Navaratnam cares for a patient inside a negative pressure room at the Humber River Hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on Dec. 9, 2020.(Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)
The Ontario government s health agency is telling hospitals across most of the province to stop performing all but emergency and life-saving surgeries because of the growing caseload of COVID-19 patients, CBC News has learned.
A memo was sent to hospitals Thursday night telling them to postpone their non-emergency surgeries, effective Monday, everywhere but in northern Ontario. Given increasing case counts and widespread community transmission across many parts of the province, we are facing mounting and extreme pressure on our critical care capacity, says Ontario Health CEO Matthew Anderson in the memo, obtained by CBC News.