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Study results shows 5% of Ontario COVID samples from Jan. 20 were variant cases

WATCH ABOVE: A Toronto research lab has pivoted their resources and is now using their platform to test for COVID-19 variants. The process speeds up the ability to find variants in comparison to the sequencing currently in place at many labs in Canada. Katherine Ward reports. – Feb 4, 2021

TORONTO — Public health officials say variants of COVID-19 were found in 5.5 per cent of cases screened on a single day in January.

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The majority of those were linked to an outbreak at a nursing home in Simcoe-Muskoka.

The results are part of a Public Health Ontario study on the spread of variants in the province.

Dr. Vanessa Allen, the agency’s top microbiologist, says the results show how quickly variants of COVID-19 can spread in an outbreak.

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Public Health Ontario screened 1,880 positive samples from Jan. 20 and found variants in 103 cases.

It says 89 of those were cases in the Simcoe-Muskoka health unit, where a deadly long-term care outbreak was driven by that strain.

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So far, Ontario has recorded 152 cases of a variant that first emerged in the U.K. and one case of another that first emerged in South Africa.

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