What Canadians can expect from COVID-19 this fall and winter

Colder weather means more time indoors and the potential for increased viral transmission

With the beginning of fall and a more transmissible strain of the coronavirus than last year's taking hold, Canadians may wonder about the outlook of the pandemic over the next few months.

Some epidemiologists and infectious disease specialists are expressing cautious optimism, hoping that greater immunity levels just may be able to contain the delta variant that causes COVID-19, and that many jurisdictions could see hospitalization rates coming down.

"I'm always optimistic, and here's why," said epidemiologist Raywat Deonandan, an associate professor at the University of Ottawa. "Pandemics have a beginning, middle and end. And where are we right now? Locally, I think we're near the end."

Others, however, like B.C. epidemiologist Caroline Colijn, suspect Canada is still heading into a "challenging fall" despite considerable progress, particularly with vaccinations.

"The delta variant is much more infectious than the COVID that we had around last fall and even last spring," she said.

As well, provinces such as Alberta and Saskatchewan are currently in crisis mode, as a spike in COVID-19 hospitalizations among the unvaccinated has overloaded their health-care systems.

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"I have no idea how long the crisis will last," said Craig Jenne, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Calgary.

"We may see the flattening of the curve in the coming days, but the real question is, when does that curve start to decline?"

Colder weather means people spending more time indoors, and the potential for an increase of viral transmission. Meanwhile, another delta surge or a new variant could emerge that drastically changes the outlook, some experts say.

Here is a look at the factors at play.

WHERE WE ARE NOW

By many measures, the country is in a much stronger position facing COVID-19 than it was this time last year.

Last fall, Canadians were still without vaccines, which wouldn't be approved until December, when Health Canada gave the green light to Pfizer-BioNTech and, weeks later, Moderna. Approval for Astra-Zeneca would follow a couple months later.

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Now, according to the CBC's vaccine tracker, Canada has reached 70 per cent of its total population and 80 per cent of its eligible population with two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

"Look how far we have come," Deonandan said. "We have extraordinary vaccines at supply levels that all of us here in the rich world can access.... We have a rapid test. We know so much about this disease. We have all the tools needed to control this."

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All the accumulated knowledge about the virus over the past year and a half makes it slightly less unpredictable, Jenne said.

"We know what works to slow it. We know who's at risk of hospitalization. We know the impact of our public health measures."

Yet, even though there are successful vaccines and successful vaccination programs, the infectiousness of the virus means they are not quite successful enough, Colijn said.

"It's so infectious that you really need almost everybody to be immunized," she said. "So where does that leave us for the outlook? What may happen is that most people who are not vaccinated will get COVID."

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HOSPITALIZATIONS, WANING IMMUNITY AND THE DELTA VARIANT

Deonandan said he expects greater immunity levels will result in a drop in the hospitalization rate — the proportion of infected people who become hospitalized.

Dr. Christopher Labos, a Montreal cardiologist with a degree in epidemiology, also offered hope that where vaccination rates are higher, and where most restrictions — mask wearing and vaccine passports — are in place, it's going to be possible to contain the delta variant.

"And, at the very least, even if we do see cases, maybe we won't see as many people ending up in hospital," he said

One of the big unknowns, however, is the potential waning of immunity over time. Though Deonandan said he expects the ability of vaccines to protect against initial infection will gradually weaken, he predicts their protection against hospitalization and death "will remain extraordinarily good."

Based on when most Canadians received their shots, waning immunity could start to be an issue around late October, said Dr. Andrew Morris, an infectious diseases specialist at Toronto's Sinai Health and University Health Network.

And the question, he said, is whether provinces will anticipate this and offer people booster shots to try to head off the potential problem.

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"If all the governments in Canada say they're going to wait to boost until we sort of see the vaccines aren't working any longer, it could kind of be a little bit too late," he said.

However, some health officials suggest another possibility — that the delta variant may have peaked. That's the analysis of the U.S.-based COVID-19 Scenario Modelling Hub, which consists of a team of professors from across the country who provide projections about the virus.

Its modelling predicts a steady decline in COVID-19 cases in the U.S., with no significant winter surge, NPR reported.

Justin Lessler, a professor in the department of epidemiology at the University of North Carolina who helps run the hub, told NPR that while there is wide-ranging uncertainty in the models, deaths could drop to 100 a day by March. That, he said, is dependant upon children getting vaccinated and that a more contagious variant doesn't emerge.

Deonandan said it's certainly possible that some parts of the world, such as the U.K. and some U.S. states, have seen the peak of the delta wave.

"I anticipate that the northern hemisphere should see a decline in the delta wave by the end of this year," he said.

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But both Deonandan and the COVID-19 Scenario Modelling Hub also offered a somewhat grim prediction — that a decline in infection rates would be due in part to the fast-spreading delta variant just running out of people to infect.

With so many delta infections among people who are unvaccinated, those who survive might have sufficient immunity, which "starts us on that herd immunity conversation again," Deonandan said.

"A combination of sufficient coverage plus unbelievably high vaccination uptake, which we are experiencing in Canada, might mean by January we will see no more waves," he said.

Getty Images: Sick woman inside looking out window covid coronavirus mask. URL: https://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/photo/young-woman-in-quarantine-wearing-a-mask-and-royalty-free-image/1210799835?adppopup=true

(A young woman in quarantine wearing a mask and looking through the window. Mario Guti/Getty Images)

NEW VARIANTS?

Having said that, variants will likely continue to emerge, but whether any will become a dominant strain remains to be seen, Labos said. Much will depend on how vaccination efforts ramp up around the world.

"New variants emerge because the virus keeps spreading," he said. "It keeps copying itself. It keeps mutating. And so the more chances you give it to copy itself, the more chances you give it to have a mutation that can turn it into a different strain that's more aggressive."

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Deonandan said he is a "tad concerned" that a new variant could emerge that changes factors such as the transmissibility of the virus, the profile of symptoms, and the ability to detect the virus.

But he also pointed out that the COVID-19 vaccines have proven effective against all the coronovirus variants that have emerged so far.

"Therefore, there's no reason to expect any new variants not to be at least a little bit preventable by our vaccines, and probably preventable by a high amount," he said. "So I'm not overly concerned about it."

Morris views things a bit differently.

"I know that there are some experts who feel that the likelihood of a more virulent strain that's vaccine resistant is extremely unlikely to happen. But, you know, I'm willing to wait and see."

This article, written by Mark Gollom, was originally published for CBC News on Sep 29, 2021.