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	<title>Bancroft this Week</title>
	<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com</link>
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	<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 7:56:07 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>COVID-19 updates for week of March 28</title>
			<link>https://www.bancroftthisweek.com/?p=12400</link>
			<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 7:56:07 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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<p>BY MICHAEL RILEY<br />Local Journalism Initiative Reporter</p>
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<p>In Canada, according to the chief public health officer of&nbsp;Canada Dr. Theresa Tam, in a news release from March&nbsp;25, she says that while daily average case counts have&nbsp;levelled off, there is variability across Canada with several&nbsp;jurisdictions reporting increases. Increased levels of transmission, with the easing of public health restrictions, are&nbsp;not unexpected as the virus continues to circulate widely,&nbsp;according to a laboratory test positivity from March 16 to&nbsp;22 of 14.5 per cent.<br />On March 25, there were 5,474 cases of COVID-19&nbsp;reported, with 132,004 active cases. The average number&nbsp;of people with COVID-19 being treated in hospitals each&nbsp;day from March 18 to 24 was 7.4 per cent lower than last&nbsp;week, according to the latest provincial and territorial&nbsp;data. During the same time, the number of people being&nbsp;treated in the ICU daily decreased by 15.3 per cent compared to the previous week, while an average of 34 deaths&nbsp;were reported daily.<br />In Ontario, as of March 28, there were 1,741 new cases&nbsp;reported. There were 655 hospitalizations, with 158 people were reported in the ICU. There were 12,405 deaths&nbsp;reported this week since the beginning of the pandemic,&nbsp;an increase of 69 cases since last week.<br />In Hastings Prince Edward, as of March 28, there&nbsp;were 108 new high-risk cases and active high-risk cases&nbsp;amounted to 209 people. There were eight outbreaks in&nbsp;high-risk settings like LTC homes, and there were 45&nbsp;deaths reported. There are 16 people who are currently&nbsp;hospitalized at Quinte Health Care hospitals and two&nbsp;people in the ICU.<br />WHO suspends decision on Canadian COVID-19 vaccine pending policy review&nbsp;Pending a review of its policies, the World Health&nbsp;Organization rejected Quebec's Medicago COVID-19&nbsp;vaccine for emergency use due to its ties to tobacco company Phillip Morris International, a shareholder in the&nbsp;Canadian pharmaceutical company.<br />Medicago's vaccine, called Covifenz, is temporarily&nbsp;rejected until the WHO comes to a decision that would&nbsp;allow it to potentially still be used for emergency use.<br />Covifenz, expected to be available to the Canadian&nbsp;public by May, has an overall efficacy rate of 71 per cent&nbsp;against variants except Omicron (which was not in circulation when testing was done) and is approved for use in&nbsp;adults aged 18 years to 64 years. The Canadian government has invested $173 million to help Medicago develop&nbsp;and produce the vaccine and has agreed to purchase 20&nbsp;million doses, with an option to buy 56 million more.<br />While the WHO explores different policy options for&nbsp;potentially valid health products that are linked to the&nbsp;tobacco industry, and will have a decision soon, Medicago&nbsp;said it will be discussing next steps and may request that&nbsp;Phillip Morris divest its shares of their company to be able&nbsp;to get the vaccine to market as quickly as possible.<br />Chemical in broccoli shows promising results in preventing and treating COVID-19.&nbsp;<br />Small amounts of a chemical found in broccoli and other&nbsp;cruciferous vegetables, sulforaphane, shows promising&nbsp;results in preventing and treating COVID-19 in cells and&nbsp;in mice.<br />Researchers at Baltimore's John Hopkins Children's&nbsp;Centre found and published these results in the Nature&nbsp;Journal Communications Biology on March 18. Even&nbsp;smaller amounts of sulforaphane combined with antiviral&nbsp;mediation remdesivir also showed promising results.<br />Human studies on these findings have yet to be done to&nbsp;conclusively prove these results on human subjects. While&nbsp;the researchers still advocate for the use of vaccines and&nbsp;antiviral agents to combat COVID-19, they say that if the&nbsp;early results hold up, sulforaphane could be a less expensive, safe and readily available commercially treatment&nbsp;for the virus.</p>
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			<wp-post_id>12400</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2022-03-29 19:25:08</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2022-03-29 23:25:08</wp-post_date_gmt>
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