One Saskatchewan I-C-U patient has already been transferred to Ontario with two more slated to be moved Tuesday, according to the Saskatchewan Health Authority.
The number of transfers to be completed on Wednesday has yet to be determined.
Meanwhile, the S-H-A says the COVID-19 vaccination booster program will be expanded, effective next Monday, October 25. COVID-19 boosters will be administered at least six months after the second dose was received for several groups of provincial residents.
Those include individuals aged 65 and over as well as people living in the Far North and on First Nation communities aged 50 and over.
Otherwise, the weekly update from the Ministry of Health update has 75 per cent of eligible Saskatchewan residents being fully vaccinated with 84 per cent having received at least one shot.
In addition, the latest dashboard update from the provincial government website had 335 hospitalized COVID-19 patients, including 83 in an I-C-U. There were eight new virus-related fatalities, plus 271 new cases and 497 recoveries, leaving 3,434 active cases of COVID-19 in Saskatchewan.
Starting October 25, the COVID-19 vaccination booster program will be expanded. COVID-19 boosters will be administered at least six months after the second dose was received for the following groups:
- Individuals aged 65 years and older.
- Individuals living in the Far North and those living on First Nation communities, aged 50 years and older.
- Health care workers, who will be asked to present a copy of their license from their professional licensing body or a workplace pay stub at the point of immunization. Saskatchewan Health Authority staff will be required to present their staff identification.
- Individuals born in 2009 or earlier with underlying health conditions that are clinically extremely vulnerable including:
- People with severe respiratory conditions including all cystic fibrosis, severe asthma and severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- People with rare diseases that significantly increase the risk of infections, such as homozygous sickle cell disease
- People who had their spleen removed
- Adults with very significant developmental disabilities that increase risk, such as Down’s Syndrome
- Adults on dialysis or with chronic kidney disease (stage 5)
- Significant neuromuscular conditions requiring respiratory support
Those with the above underlying medical conditions, the Ministry of Health will be providing a letter to your physician or nurse practitioner for presentation at the point of immunization.
Immunization record will be confirmed at the clinic or pharmacy location to ensure that it has been at least six months since your last COVID-19 vaccination.
It is recommended that if you received two doses of a mRNA vaccine, your booster dose should be the same vaccine type. If you received two different vaccine types, your third dose should be the matching mRNA vaccine — a full dose of the type of vaccine an individual received for their second dose will be given as a booster dose. If you received two doses of Astra Zeneca, it is recommended that you receive an mRNA vaccine booster immunization.
If you have already received a third dose for travel or in a long-term care or personal-care home setting, you do not require a fourth dose. The third dose already received provides the necessary increased protection; you do not need any further doses at this time.
The eligible populations announced today will be able to start booking their third doses online through the SHA Online Booking System, receiving the vaccine at clinics or through a pharmacy as of October 25. These eligible groups will not be added to the online registration system, or be able to book an appointment at a clinic or pharmacy until that date.
Additional populations eligible for booster vaccinations will be announced in the coming weeks, once the populations announced today have received their third doses.
A list of those populations already eligible to receive third doses in Saskatchewan including residents 80 and older, is available at Saskatchewan.ca/covid-19.
Out of Province Patient Transfers
To date, the Saskatchewan Health Authority has transferred one intensive care patient to Ontario with two more in the process of transfer today. These transfers are the result of the prolonged period of high demand on Saskatchewan’s ICUs which has an impact on the quality and availability of critical care. The number of transfers being scheduled for tomorrow is still being finalized.
The number of Saskatchewan patients out of province will be reported daily in the highlights report on the provincial COVID-19 dashboard on the Active Cases page.
Selection of patients for transport involves a number of factors. A clinical team performs a daily assessment of all patients and will carefully match each patient to an appropriate available bed. The team will also consider the local and overall system capacity at the time the assessments are being made. Patients selected for transfer will be those that are medically stable and appropriate for transfer. A highly skilled care team will accompany them throughout the duration of the transfer.
COVID-19 Summary for October 19, 2021:
- From October 13 – 19, 23,495 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been given in Saskatchewan, bringing the total number of vaccines administered in the province to 1,627,570.
- As of October 19, 84 per cent of those 12+ have received their first dose and 75 per cent of those 12+ are fully vaccinated.
- There were 2,232 new cases of COVID-19 to report in Saskatchewan from October 13 – 19, bringing the provincial total to 74,940 cases. There were 3,186 recoveries recorded during the same period.
- The seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases in Saskatchewan is currently 319 (26.5 per 100,000).
- Forty new deaths were reported October 13 – 19.
- There were 563 new lineage results reported for October 13 – 19.
- As of October 19, there are 335 people in hospital: 252 are receiving inpatient care and 83 are in intensive care. Two hundred and fifty-one of the people in hospital (75 per cent) are not fully vaccinated. In addition, one ICU patient has been transferred to Ontario.
- From October 13 – 19, there were 19,337 COVID-19 tests processed in Saskatchewan.
Highlights
- As of October 19th, there are 271 new confirmed cases of COVID-19, bringing the total to 74,940 reported cases
- The new cases are located in the Far North West (9), Far North East (11), North West (30), North Central (32), North East (3), Saskatoon (82), Central West (1), Central East (22), Regina (35), South West (6), South Central (2) and South East (10) zones and 28 new cases have pending residence information
- 12 cases with pending residence information were assigned to North West (from October 7 (1), October 9 (1), October 14 (1), October 17 (1)), North Central (from October 14 (2)), Saskatoon (from October 7 (1)), Central East (from October 5 (1), October 12 (1)), Regina (from October 14 (1), October 17 (1)), and South East (from October 16 (1)) zones
- Four (4) cases were removed (3 repeats & 1 unknown reason) from North West (from October 14 (1), October 15 (1)), Saskatoon (from October 13 (1)) and one (1) with pending residence information (from October 9)
- 74,940 cases are confirmed
- 18,366 cases are from the North area (8,138 North West, 7,518 North Central, 2,710 North East)
- 18,053 cases are from the Saskatoon area
- 14,778 cases are from the Regina area
- 9,055 cases are from the South area (2,043 South West, 2,760 South Central, 4,252 South East)
- 8,895 cases are from the Far North area (4,160 Far North West, 541 Far North Central, 4,194 Far North East)
- 5,151 cases are from the Central area (1,352 Central West, 3,799 Central East)
- 642 cases have pending residence information
- 3,434 cases are considered active and 70,713 cases are considered recovered
- Over a quarter (28.4%) of new cases are in the age category of 20 to 39
- More than one-quarter (27.0%) of new cases eligible for vaccination (aged 12 years and older) were fully vaccinated
- As of October 19th, a total of 335 individuals are hospitalized, including 252 inpatient hospitalizations and 83 ICU hospitalizations. Of the 335 patients, 251 (74.9%) were not fully vaccinated. In addition, one (1) ICU patient has been transferred to Ontario.
- Eight (8) new deaths reported today. 793 Saskatchewan residents with COVID-19 have died, with a case fatality rate of 1.1%.
- 1,197,080 COVID-19 tests have been performed in the province. As of October 17th, 2021, when other provincial and national numbers are available from PHAC, Saskatchewan’s per capita rate was 1,009,663 tests performed per million. The national rate was 1,187,742 tests performed per million population.
- The 7-day average of new COVID-19 case numbers was 319 (26.5 new cases per 100,000)
COVID-19 new cases and vaccination status, October 19, 2021
| Age Group | Unvaccinated | Vaccinated, with one dose, and or two doses <14 days | Vaccinated, Second dose >=14 days | Total new cases |
| 0-11 | 71 | 71 | ||
| 12-19 | 19 | 2 | 1 | 22 |
| 20-29 | 18 | 1 | 8 | 27 |
| 30-39 | 34 | 4 | 12 | 50 |
| 40-49 | 18 | 11 | 29 | |
| 50-59 | 21 | 1 | 5 | 27 |
| 60-69 | 10 | 1 | 9 | 20 |
| 70-79 | 9 | 3 | 12 | |
| 80+ | 7 | 1 | 5 | 13 |
| Total | 207 | 10 | 54 | 271 |















