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One Death, 40 New Cases of COVID-19, State of Emergency Renewed
News releases from the Government of Nova Scotia
novascotia.ca
Today, May 28, Nova Scotia is reporting a death related to COVID-19. A woman in her 50s has died in Central Zone.
There have now been 80 COVID-19-related deaths in Nova Scotia.
Nova Scotia is also reporting 40 new cases of COVID-19 and 92 recoveries.
There are 29 cases in Central Zone, five in Eastern Zone, four in Northern Zone and two in Western Zone.
There is still community spread in Central Zone and limited community spread in Sydney. Northern and Western Zones continue to be closely monitored for community spread.
As of today, Nova Scotia has 585 active cases of COVID-19. There are 53 people in hospital, including 18 in ICU. The median age of people hospitalized in the third wave is 53 for non-ICU, and 57 for people in ICU.
On May 27, Nova Scotia Health Authority's labs completed 6,381 tests.
There were 27,023 tests administered between May 21 and 27 at the rapid-testing pop-up sites in Sydney, Brooklyn, Queens Co., Dartmouth and Halifax.
As of May 27, 560,843 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered. Of those, 43,252 Nova Scotians have received their second dose.
Since April 1, there have been 3,755 positive COVID-19 cases and 14 deaths. Cases range in age from under 10 to over 90. There are 3,156 resolved cases. Cumulative cases may change as data is updated in Panorama.
Travel within Nova Scotia:
Nova Scotians should remain as close to their home and community as possible, unless travel is essential for work, caregiving, necessary shopping or medical appointments, including vaccination appointments. In this instance, 'community' is defined as one's municipality or county. Detailed information is available at https://novascotia.ca/coronavirus/restrictions-and-guidance/ .
Testing advice:
Nova Scotians with or without symptoms can book a test at https://covid-self-assessment.novascotia.ca/en for primary assessment centres across the province. Those with no symptoms are strongly encouraged to use pop-up sites if they want to be tested.
More information on testing can be found at https://www.nshealth.ca/coronavirustesting . Anyone with COVID-19 symptoms is advised to self-isolate and book a COVID-19 test. Everyone they live with must also self-isolate until the person receives their first negative test result. If the test is positive, public health will advise everyone about what to do.
Anyone advised by public health that they were a close contact needs to complete a full 14-day quarantine, regardless of test results. If the close contact is symptomatic, everyone they live with must also self-isolate until the person receives their first negative test result. If the test is positive, public health will advise everyone about what to do.
Symptoms and self-assessment:
Nova Scotians should visit https://covid-self-assessment.novascotia.ca/ to do a self-assessment if in the past 48 hours they have had or are currently experiencing mild symptoms, including:
- fever (i.e. chills/sweats) or cough (new or worsening)
- sore throat
- runny nose/nasal congestion
- headache
- shortness of breath/difficulty breathing
People should call 811 if they cannot access the online self-assessment or wish to speak with a nurse about their symptoms.
Anyone with symptoms should immediately self-isolate and book a test.
The province is renewing the state of emergency to protect the health and safety of Nova Scotians and ensure safety measures and other important actions can continue. The order will take effect at noon, Sunday, May 30, and extend to noon, Sunday, June 13, unless government terminates or extends it.
Quick Facts:
- a state of emergency was declared under the Emergency Management Act on March 22, 2020, and extended to June 13, 2021
- due to an increased number of investigations, the exposure category (i.e., travel, close contact or under investigation) is not available by release time; a breakdown by zone identifying exposure categories will no longer be provided regularly