Welcome to

Ron’s COVID-19 Page

What’s new on this site

The COVID municipal wastewater PCR testing results for each province, which are updated weekly on our Canada page, have all been revised to accommodate a restructuring of the Canada Public Health Infobase from which we draw the data.

Who We Are

This site shares the results of an ongoing personal project to better understand why the pandemic developed in such a damaging way in Canada, what other jurisdictions have done to better protect their citizens from those impacts and what we can collectively do to reduce the possible carnage from futures wave caused by this rapidly-evolving virus.  It neither represents nor receives funding from any other person or organization.  The sole purpose is to provide the latest and most meaningful data and insights related to the pandemic and its impact on our society in a readily accessible format.  You will find many meaningful charts and analyses which provide context for the statistics summarized in the above table by clicking on the Global, Canada, Ontario and Kingston menus. For more details, see the About page. 

Weekly Pandemic Update

April 6 to 12

Given the relatively minor changes in the past week’s official COVID data, we continue to approach the 2025 seasonal low for new COVID infections. 

The Ontario PCR test positivity rates, COVID hospitalization rates and ICU occupancy rates displayed in this week’s composite chart all point to the pandemic approaching but not quite having reached its typical seasonal low, with all those indicators modestly lower than their comparable rates last year at this time. 

The more independent Canadian COVID-19 Resource Canada is in the process of calculating its March national severity index, which means that the data is subject to change next week.  That includes their estimate of one currently-infected and hence infectious Ontarian among every 112 people. That said, the index still shows overall Canadian infection rates continuing their modest decline, with Ontario again being the most infected province. 

We continue to alternate Canadian and US data on the relative incidence of the currently-circulating COVID strains, with this week’s composite chart showing the US numbers. For the third week in a row, the Canadian and US numbers continue to diverge despite Canada having closely tracked the US trends for most of the pandemic.  In the US, the LP.8.1 strain continues to extend its dominance with a 64% “market” share.  The previously-dominant XEC strain now accounts for only 18% and the rest of the menagerie are declining with only a few percent each. In Canada, by contrast, XEC and LP.8.1 are nearly tied at 20% and 19% respectively, with LF.7 starting to catch up at 15%.  In the US, it is stable at a mere 4%.  The only reasonable explanation for the sudden divergence in our two countries’ respective COVID populations remains the dramatic reduction in the number of snowbirds crossing the border.