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COVID-19: Quebec reports 63 more deaths, hospitalizations drop by 36

People are shown outside a COVID-19 testing site in Montreal, Saturday, Jan. 15, 2022. January isn't over, but it's already the fifth deadliest month of the COVID-19 pandemic in Quebec. The province has reported 1,144 deaths linked to the virus this month, the most since January 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes. GMH

Quebec is reporting another 63 deaths linked to the novel Coronavirus on Tuesday bringing the death toll since the start of the health crisis to 13,286.

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Pandemic-related hospitalizations continue to drop with 36 fewer COVID-19 patients reported over the previous day.

Health officials said 207 new patients were admitted while 243 were discharged for a total of 2,852.

Of those, 218 are being treated in intensive care units — a drop of five over Monday.

Another 2,730 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed bringing the total to date to 864,621. Recoveries stand at 812,328.

Meanwhile 21,699 COVID-19 tests were performed at screening facilities on Jan. 30, the latest date for which numbers are available.

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Health officials warn that since screening continues to be reserved for priority groups, cases numbers do not accurately reflect the situation.

So far, 48,106 people have registered results of at-home rapid tests on the government website, 36,391 of which were positive for COVID-19.

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On the vaccination front, 52,345 doses of a COVID-19 vaccine were administered in the last 24 hours, for a total of more than 17.7 million injections since the start of the campaign.

Also on Tuesday, Quebec announced it was dropping plans to impose a financial penalty on those who are unvaccinated against COVID-19.

Premier François Legault made the announcement Tuesday afternoon in Quebec City, during a briefing on the ongoing health crisis.

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