COVID-19 cases.This comes after weeks of steady increase.“It’s largely in the community,” says Durham’s chief medical officer of health, Dr.
Robert Kyle.“Either people are unaware of how they are contracting it or they are spreading it in their households, that sort of thing.”Wednesday’s 42 cases marked the highest daily jump in the region since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, with another 28 reported Thursday.Kyle says what we are seeing now is the effects of schools being open.“It’s children, it’s students, it’s teachers, health-care workers.
It’s people who live in the community,” says Kyle. 34 people in Durham Region given incorrect positive COVID-19 tests “This is happening in child-care centres, schools, congregate living.