Skip to content

COVID-19 update: 244 new cases, 282 recoveries and 11 new deaths

There are 244 new cases of COVID-19 and 282 recoveries to report in Saskatchewan on Jan. 28, bringing the provincial total to date to 23,038 cases. Eleven Saskatchewan residents who tested positive for COVID-19 have died.
COVID-19

There are 244 new cases of COVID-19 and 282 recoveries to report in Saskatchewan on Jan. 28, bringing the provincial total to date to 23,038 cases.

Eleven Saskatchewan residents who tested positive for COVID-19 have died. One reported death was in the 40-49 age group from the Far North East (1) zone; two reported deaths were in the 60-69 age group from the North Central (1) and Saskatoon (1) zones; two reported deaths were in the 70-79 age group from the Far North East (1) and North West (1) zones; and six reported deaths were in the 80+ age group from the Saskatoon (2) and Regina (4) zones.

The seven-day average of daily new cases is 244 (19.9 new cases per 100,000 population.

The Ministry of Health is updating data reporting systems. As such, it is anticipated that the COVID-19 dashboard will be unavailable until Feb. 1. The case news release and map of current cases will continue to be issued daily based on a separate data reporting process.

The new cases are located in the Far North West (25), Far North Central (7), Far North East (14), North West (20), North Central (13), North East (6), Saskatoon (70), Central West (5), Central East (10), Regina (54), South Central (4) and South East (16) zones.

Five cases with pending residence information were assigned to the Far North East (1), North West (1), North Central (2) and South East (1) zones.

A total of 20,275 individuals have recovered and 2,478 cases are considered active.

Two hundred and eight (208) people are in hospital. One hundred and seventy-one (171) people are receiving inpatient care: Far North West (5), Far North East (1), North West (14), North Central (27), North East (4), Saskatoon (66), Central West (1), Central East (11), Regina (38), South West (1), South Central (1) and South East (2).  Thirty-seven (37) people are in intensive care: North West (3), North Central (2), Saskatoon (18), Central East (1), Regina (12) and South West (1).

There were 2,575 COVID-19 tests processed in Saskatchewan on Jan. 27.

To date, 500,043 COVID-19 tests have been processed in Saskatchewan.  As of Jan. 26, when other provincial and national numbers were available, Saskatchewan’s per capita rate was 283,057 people tested per million population. The national rate was 457,522 people tested per million population.

The seven-day average of daily new cases is 244 (19.9 new cases per 100,000 population.

The Ministry of Health is updating data reporting systems.  As such, it is anticipated that the COVID-19 dashboard will be unavailable until Monday, February 1.  The case news release and map of current cases will continue to be issued daily based on a separate data reporting process.

Vaccination update:

There were 118 administered doses of COVID-19 vaccine reported yesterday in Saskatchewan – this brings the total number of vaccines administered in the province to 34,672.  As of Jan. 28, 106 per cent of the doses received have been administered. This overage is due to efficiencies in drawing extra doses from vials of vaccine received.

The doses were administered in the following zones: Far North Central (10), North West (12), North Central (11), Central East (55) and South East (30).  Back-dated corrections submitted for January 19-25 have realized 61 vaccinations reported in error.  These have been removed from the counts.

For a listing of first and second doses in Saskatchewan administered by geographic zone, visit https://www.saskatchewan.ca/covid19-vaccine-update.

A shipment of 5,850 doses of Pfizer vaccine will be arriving in Saskatchewan the week of Feb. 1.  This shipment will be divided between the Lloydminster, Spiritwood, Saskatoon, Regina, Swift Current and Moosomin areas and used to continue vaccinating priority populations.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks