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Saskatchewan hits another high with 439 new COVID-19 cases reported Nov. 21

Saskatchewan outpaced Manitoba for new COVID-19 cases reported on Nov. 21

Saskatchewan set another record for new COVID-19 cases on Saturday, Nov. 21, with 439 new cases reported.

The number of people in hospital has climbed to 91, from 85 the day before. New recoveries came in at 41. The seven-day average is now 203 new cases per day 鈥 a measurement the Ministry of Health said it would now be reporting.

On Nov. 8, that seven-day average was 97.6, meaning the average doubled in 13 days after doubling from 45.7 in 16 days.

As of Nov. 21, 2,537 cases were considered active, 3,667 people recovered and 33 deaths related to COVID-19 were reported.

This is the first time in the last two months Saskatchewan had exceeded Manitoba for new cases in one day.

On the same day, Manitoba reported 385 new cases and 10 deaths. Manitoba鈥檚 seven-day average for new cases is now 407.4, which has remained relatively flat for the last nine days, between 390.0 and 407. 4 average cases per day.

North Dakota reported 1,526 new cases and 16 more deaths. Its seven-day average is now 1,244.3 鈥 the lowest point it has been since Nov. 4. On Nov. 18, North Dakota鈥檚 seven-day average peaked at 1,415.7 cases per day.

Premier Scott Moe reacted in a Facebook post, saying, 鈥淭oday鈥檚 record new case numbers are very concerning. Our seven-day average for new cases is now 203, which is the highest it has ever been.

鈥淲hile it鈥檚 too soon for the new measures implemented last week to have made an impact, we are continuing to evaluate the situation closely and will consider further measures. Our government is working closely with Dr. (Saqib) Shahab and public health officials and will have more to say early next week.

鈥淔or now, let鈥檚 all do our part to keep ourselves and those around us safe. Reduce your number of contacts and your activity outside the home. If you do go out, wear a mask, which is now required in all indoor public places everywhere in Saskatchewan. Physically distance, wash your hands often, stay home when you can. We can keep ourselves and those around us safe and reduce the spread of COVID-19 by taking these steps,鈥 the premier concluded.

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