Skip to main content

Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer cries as he presents COVID-19 modelling

Share
REGINA -

Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer broke down in tears today as he made a presentation during a teleconference on COVID-19 modelling in the province.

Dr. Saqib Shahab says it's distressing to see what is happening in Saskatchewan's hospitals and intensive care units.

The province continues to have the highest death rate among the provinces, and has started transferring patients to Ontario as the health authority runs out of hospital beds and staff.

The province's COVID-19 modelling, which is based on current data, shows hospitalizations will continue to increase unless more restrictions on gathering sizes are implemented.

Shahab says at this rate the health-care system will not return to sustainable levels until March 2022.

Tearing up, he says he has no shame in pleading with the public to keep a small bubble of two or three households and to get vaccinated.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

The American paradox of protest: Celebrated and condemned, welcomed and muzzled

Americans cherish the right to assemble, to speak out, to petition for the redress of grievances. It's enshrined in the first of the constitutional amendments. They laud social actions of the past and recognize the advances toward equality that previous generations made, often at risk of life and limb. But those same activities can produce anger and outright opposition when life's routines are interrupted, and wariness that those speaking out are outsiders looking to sow chaos and influence impressionable minds.

Stay Connected