PSA: 32 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 (#859 - #890)

Algoma Public Health

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PSA: 32 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 (#859 - #890)

Mon, Nov 22, 2021

 

Please note, due to a power outage at our Sault Ste. Marie office, we were unable to issue yesterday’s case count.

The information shown below is reflective of Algoma’s case count for Sunday, November 21, 2021.

 

(November 21, 2021): 

 

We are reporting thirty-two new cases of COVID-19 (#859 - #890), all from Sault Ste. Marie and Area

 

NOTE: Due to increasing rates of COVID-19 in Algoma, we are receiving assistance from case and contact managers who may be from the provincial workforce or a partner health unit. If you are a case or a high-risk contact, you may receive a call from a case/contact manager from outside of Algoma Public Health.

 

Details of the confirmed cases:

 

Case
Number
Exposure
Category
Status Tested
Case #859 Unknown Self-isolating November 19. 2021
Case #860 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #861 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #862 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #863 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #864 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #865 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #866 Close Contact Self-Isolating November 20, 2021
Case #867 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #868 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #869 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #870 Close Contact Self-Isolating November 20, 2021
Case #871 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #872 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #873 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021 
Case #874 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021 
Case #875 Under Investigation Under Investigation November 20, 2021
Case #876 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #877 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #878 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #879 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #880 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #881 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #882 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #883 Close Contact Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #884 Unknown Self-isolating November 20, 2021
Case #885 Unknown Unknown November 21, 2021
Case #886 Close Contact Self-isolating November 21, 2021
Case #887 Close Contact Self-isolating November 21, 2021
Case #888 Close Contact Self-isolating November 21, 2021
Case #889 Close Contact Self-isolating November 21, 2021
Case #890 Unknown Self-isolating November 21, 2021

 

 

Unknown exposure means the person did not have recent international travel or close contact with a known confirmed case. How the person acquired the virus is not known. 

 

Close contact means the person acquired their infection through close contact with a known confirmed case. For example, living together with a case, or spending more than 15 minutes with a case while less than 2 metres apart, are considered high risk close contact exposures.

 

International travel means the person acquired their infection from travel outside of Canada.

 

Critical Actions to protect yourself, your household, and your workplace

 

1. Anyone who is sick, even with mild symptoms, must stay home and isolate away from others - regardless of whether you have received the COVID-19 vaccine.

  • Take the COVID-19 self-assessment every day before work and complete the school screening tool before school or child care.
  • Get tested if you have any COVID-19 symptoms, and isolate at home until results are available.
  • Household members who are not fully immunized must also stay home until the symptomatic person's test results are available.
  • Isolation means you must stay home and not go to work or school.  Do not gather, visit, or have visitors or playdates while you are isolating.

2. Cut back on unnecessary activities where you have unmasked, face-to-face close contact with people you don't live with.  Do this even if you are fully immunized, and especially if you have vulnerable health conditions or are not fully immunized.

  • Spending time indoors with other people without masks is a higher risk activity, especially if not everyone is fully immunized.  Examples include play dates, sharing meals together, and certain group sports and recreational activities.  To lower your risk at this time, only participate in these types of activities that are most important and essential; do these activities less often, with fewer people, for shorter periods of time, and outdoors if possible.

 

3. Get your COVID-19 vaccine

 

Learn more: