NL

COVID-19 hospitalizations drop again in N.L., as province adds 234 new cases

Fewer people are in hospital in Newfoundland and Labrador than in recent days because of COVID-19, but the province continues to see steady new daily cases.

No update to be provided over the weekend, says Public Health

Nurses in a hospital room.
Newfoundland and Labrador's active caseload remains relatively stable as restaurants, gyms and retail stores prepare to raise capacity limits on Monday. (Mikaela MacKenzie/The Canadian Press)

Fewer people are in hospital due to COVID-19 in Newfoundland and Labrador than in recent days, but the province continues to see a steady influx of new daily cases.

The Department of Health said in a media release Friday that it has confirmed 234 new cases in the last 24 hours. Most of those infections, 163, are in the Eastern Health region. Twenty-four cases are in Central Health, 32 are in Western Health and 15 are in Labrador-Grenfell Health.

With 227 new recoveries since Thursday, the province's known active caseload ticks up to 1,757. Thirteen people are in hospital, down three from Thursday. Five people are in intensive care.

Just more than half a million COVID-19 tests have been administered since the pandemic began.

The next update won't come until Monday, as the Department of Health says it will switch to providing updates on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays beginning next week. The province used this update strategy before the Omicron wave began, when it returned to issuing daily updates. 

The next COVID-19 briefing is scheduled for Wednesday, the Health Department said.

The province announced this week it will begin dropping some public health restrictions on Monday, after reintroducing tighter measures just prior to Christmas, at the outset of the Omicron wave.

As part of the first wave of changes, retail stores will have no capacity restrictions beginning Monday. Restaurants, gyms, fitness studios and dance studios can operate at 75 per cent capacity. Eating and drinking is permitted only when seated, and masks must be worn when not eating or drinking.

Faith-based ceremonies will move to 75 per cent capacity where the province's vaccine passport is used, and 50 per cent in places without it. Visitations will also move to 50 per cent, while wakes outside a funeral home or place of worship will be allowed 20 people.

Informal gatherings will be allowed to seat 25 people, while formal gatherings will see no change.

Sports teams will be able to compete outside their region but can play only one game per day. Tournaments are not permitted.

On March 14, provided epidemiology remains "favourable," all restrictions will be lifted, including capacity limits, masking, and proof of vaccination requirements, the Health Department said.

Despite the changes, the province says its mandatory vaccination policy for public service workers will continue past March 14. The policy will stay in place as an additional protection for residents as the province transitions into living with COVID-19, the government said in a media release Friday.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador