Canadians across the country mark Remembrance Day
Canadians gathered Monday in cities and towns across the country to honour the sacrifice of men and women in uniform who gave their lives in service of the country's values and principles.
For the first time ever, Canada surpassed 20,000 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, setting yet another daily record.
Of the 20,699 cases reported on Thursday, the vast majority are in Ontario and Quebec.
It took 694 days from the first reported case of the novel coronavirus in Canada to reach 10,000 daily cases, a bar set on Dec. 19. It only took four days after that to reach 20,000 daily cases.
The figure, compiled by CTVNews.ca, is recent as of 7 p.m. EST. Northwest Territories have yet to report.
The seven-day rolling average for new daily cases climbed to 12,459.6, also a new high. As it stands, 54.62 new cases are being reported for every 100,000 people.
Cases have risen swiftly this month as more people spend time indoors and gather for the holidays, and as the new Omicron variant continues to spread. Provinces also have attempted to make vaccine booster shots and rapid tests more accessible over the holiday season.
On Wednesday, 14,987 new cases were reported, along with 11,692 on Tuesday and 10,665 on Monday.
Nearly all of the new cases reported Thursday are from Ontario and Quebec.
Ontario logged a on Thursday, surpassing a previous high of 4,812 on April 16.
The province's positivity rate rose to 16 per cent, the highest it's ever been.
Most of the new cases, or 4,392, involved people who are fully vaccinated, while the rest, 1,398, involved people who are unvaccinated, partially vaccinated or whose vaccination status is unknown.
Although the gap has narrowed in recent weeks, of Ontarians who are unvaccinated are still contracting COVID-19 at a rate of 27.8 per 100,000 people, compared to those who are fully vaccinated at 25.71.
Currently, of Ontarians eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine are fully vaccinated. Unvaccinated residents also continue to be disproportionately admitted into . The province reported seven new deaths.
But the largest surge came in Quebec where 9,397 new cases were reported, a nearly 50 per cent increase over the previous record of 6,361 set just the day before. in the province due to COVID-19.
also set a new daily high with 35 new infections on Thursday, while one new case was reported in Nunavut.
Manitoba reported 556 new cases, one death and 239 recoveries, while Newfoundland and Labrador logged 100 new cases and nine recoveries.
New Brunswick reported a new daily high of 257 cases, with two new deaths and Nova Scotia recorded 689 new COVID-19 cases, with 3,844 active cases in total.
Saskatchewan announced 194 new cases, one death and 35 recoveries.
, the provincial government reported 1,625 new infections from 11,800 tests, which translates to a positivity rate of 13.6 per cent. There were no deaths within the previous 24 hours.
There were as well as one new death.
With files from CTVNews.ca's Tom Yun
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