COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario


The COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario is an ongoing viral pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019, a novel infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The first identified case of COVID-19 in Canada during the 2019–20 worldwide pandemic occurred in the Canadian province of Ontario after it arrived on January 22, 2020, when a man returned to Toronto from travel in China, including Wuhan; the case was announced on January 25 and by March 17 the province had cases spread through community transmission.
On March 17, the Government of Ontario declared a state of emergency, ordering the closure of indoor recreational programs, public libraries, theatres, cinemas, private schools, daycares and the prohibition of all public gatherings of more than 50 people. Bars and restaurants however were allowed to remain open, but only for those that offer takeout and delivery services. By order of the province, starting March 24, non-essential businesses were closed and on March 30, a province-wide closure of all outdoor recreational amenities began.
On April 3, the Government of Ontario released projections indicating that over the full course of the pandemic with no mitigation measures 100,000 deaths would occur, and with the then-current measures 3,000 to 15,000 deaths would occur. Projections for test-confirmed cases by April 30 were 12,500, 80,000, and 300,000. On April 20, their modelling showed that widespread physical distancing had reduced this expected case scenario to "likely less than 20,000."
Since early April, the majority of the deaths occurring each day have been of residents of long-term care homes. In late April, one out of five of all long-term care homes in Ontario had an outbreak and 70% to 80% of all COVID-19 deaths had been in retirement and long-term care homes.

Timeline

January–February

On January 23, the first presumptive case in Canada was admitted to Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto and placed into a negative pressure chamber. The patient, a male in his 50s who travelled between Wuhan and Guangzhou before returning to Toronto on January 22, contacted emergency services following rapid onset symptoms. The presumption of infection in the patient was made after a rapid test was done at Public Health Ontario's Toronto laboratory, and was announced on January 25. Final testing conducted at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Manitoba confirmed the presumptive case on January 27. Authorities said that the patient was experiencing respiratory problems but was in stable condition. His condition later improved and he was released from hospital on January 31.
On January 27, the Chief Medical Officer of Health of Ontario announced the man's wife as the second presumptive case. Officials reported that she was in good condition and that she was asymptomatic.
On January 31, the third case in Ontario was reported in the city of London. Officials said that the individual, a woman in her 20s and a student at University of Western Ontario, returned from Wuhan on January 23. She was asymptomatic and had tested negative at first, but additional advanced testing confirmed that the woman had low levels of the virus in her system. Officials said that the individual wore a mask during her voyage and she voluntarily entered self-isolation upon her return, making a full recovery after two or three days. On the same day, the Government of Ontario reported that 17 cases were under investigation within its provincial jurisdiction. Officials said that most of the individuals under investigation were awaiting results while in self-isolation at home. As of January 30, the associate medical officer of Ontario said that the province had conducted a total of 67 tests with 38 negative results. Officials said that all possible cases—including previous negative results—were being retested as additional assessments become available.
CFB Trenton in Trenton, Ontario has been used as a quarantine facility for repatriated Canadians since February 7. By March 24, 13 positive cases for the virus of the repatriated citizens at CFB Trenton were reported.
On February 24, a fourth presumptive case in Ontario was announced of a woman in her 20s who presented to a hospital on February 21 with symptoms after travelling to Wuhan. The woman was tested locally with a positive test result and the sample was sent to the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. On February 24, health officials in Ontario stated that all three previous cases in Ontario were "resolved", which means patients had two consecutive negative test results 24 hours apart and that the "system was working".

March

On March 5, Ontario reported three more cases of the virus, for a total of 23 in the province, with cases in Toronto, Kitchener, and Mississauga being reported. The three cases came from Iran, Italy, and the Grand Princess cruise ship, respectively. It was also announced that another case in Ontario was resolved.
Five cases, two imported from each of Iran and the Grand Princess, and one from Las Vegas, were reported on March 6. Four more cases were reported to have been imported from Colorado, Washington, D.C., France, and Germany on March 8, bringing the total to 32.
On March 9, Ontario confirmed two new cases of coronavirus, bringing the total number of cases in the province to 34. They are an octogenarian and a septuagenarian from Toronto having travelled to Iran, where cases of COVID-19 had multiplied in recent weeks.
On March 10, a close contact of a previous case and a man who travelled to Switzerland were confirmed as Ontario's 35th and 36th case, respectively. Later the same day, a Sudbury man who attended the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada conference in Toronto on March 2–3 was confirmed as the 37th positive case, and the first in northern Ontario.
On March 11, a 40-year-old man who recently travelled to Austria was confirmed as the first coronavirus case in Ottawa. The overall coronavirus case number in Ontario rose to 42 on the same day. On March 12, 17 new cases were confirmed including a baby boy who had recently visited the North York General Hospital in Toronto. That day, the total number of cases in Ontario increased to 59. On March 13, health officials reported 19 additional cases, bringing the number of cases to 79, and on the 14th, 24 more, making the total 103. On March 17, it was announced that a man in his 70s, who had died in Barrie, was the first death in Ontario as a result of COVID-19. On March 18, an undisclosed player for the Ottawa Senators hockey team was tested positive. That day, 23 new cases were confirmed in Ontario that day, bringing the total number of cases to 212.
From the initial case on January 23 to March 18, over half of the reported cases are reported in Toronto, of which 11 are under investigation for community transmission. Hamilton reported 23 cases, Ottawa reported 19 cases, Durham reported 18 cases and Waterloo Region reporting 14 cases.

April

On April 2, Lakeridge Health declared an outbreak of COVID-19 at Lakeridge Health Oshawa in Oshawa, and announced that one of its in-patient units would be temporarily closed after a hospital-acquired case of COVID-19 was transmitted to a health care worker treating the patient.
On April 9, Ontario reported its first death of a healthcare worker, a man in his fifties in Brampton.
The Canadian Armed Forces was deployed to five nursing homes in the Greater Toronto Area, in late April.

May

By May 4, 2020, outbreaks on four different inpatient units were declared at Toronto Western Hospital. The first was declared on April 18 while three others were declared on April 30. On May 10, another outbreak was declared on another floor at the hospital. While the term outbreak differs in definition by hospital, Toronto Western Hospital defines it as the confirmation of one positive patient per unit. On May 13, the hospital's emergency department declared an outbreak after five of its staff tested positive.
With the weather getting warmer, on Saturday, May 23, 2020, estimates of 10,000 mostly young people grouped into Trinity Bellwoods Park in Toronto. Public outrage ensued as well as condemnation from Premier Ford and Toronto's medical officer of health Eileen de Villa. After making a tour of the city's parks, speaking with citizens, Mayor John Tory was also seen at the park and was criticized for lack of social distancing and improperly wearing a mask. He publicly apologized for his actions to following day. No social distancing fines were placed, however, there were several issued for public urination. Police presence was increased the following day to prevent any subsequent large gatherings. The following week, 'social distancing circles' were painted on the lawn in the park modelled after similar tactics used in San Francisco and New York City.
Canadian Armed Forces Brigadier General C. J. J. Mialkowski filed a report on conditions in the five Toronto-area nursing homes, in which they were assisting, on May 14. It did not reach the Defence Minister until a week later, after which there was a delay in notifying the Province of Ontario. The document alleges extreme conditions and abuse.

June

At least 343 Mexican migrant workers in Windsor-Essex tested positive for COVID-19, with two deaths. As a response, the Mexican government chose to prohibit any more migrant workers from travelling to Canada. There are approximately 11,000 Mexican migrant workers in Canada currently.
Federally, on June 16, Prime Minister Trudeau announced an eight-week extension to the CERB.
On June 29, after an extended period of provincial decline in new cases, extensive testing done in Windsor-Essex revealed a spike in numbers amongst migrant workers.

Government response

Ontario has announced they have a dedicated web page updated twice daily with the total and new cases. In addition, they have been making new releases as cases are confirmed, with their source whether they are due to travel history or close contact. Ontario Minister of Health Christine Elliott and Minister of Long-Term Care Merrilee Fullerton is overseeing the emergency plan for the virus.

March

On March 12, the Government of Ontario announced publicly funded schools would be closed for an additional two weeks after March Break until April 5.
On March 15, The Ontario Superior Court of Justice announced a suspension of most criminal matters, including trials until the end of May. On that same date the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation also announced that all casino resorts and facilities would close until further notice to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.
On March 17, Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a province-wide state of emergency. This included prohibition of all public events of over 50 people, the closure of libraries, theatres, cinemas, private schools and daycares. While most bars and restaurants were allowed remain open, however they can only offer takeout and delivery services. The following day, a state of emergency was also declared in Peel Region and Simcoe County by Warden George Cornell.
On March 20 further measures were announced including waiving the three months waiting period for health care coverage, the launch of an e-learning portal and extended privileges for hospitals to re-deploy staff. The same day, Acting Mayor Jesse Helmer declared a state of emergency in the City of London.
On March 23, Ford announced that all "non-essential" businesses be ordered closed starting 11:59 p.m. on March 24. Ford also stated that schools would remain closed past the original April 6 opening date and until further notice. A list of 74 "essential" businesses was published later in the day on March 23. The same day, a state of emergency was declared in Toronto by Mayor John Tory, in York Region by Chair Wayne Emmerson, and in Halton Region by Chair Gary Carr. The following day, a state of emergency was also declared in Durham Region by Chair John Henry and in Kawartha Lakes by Mayor Andy Letham.
On March 25, Ford and Finance Minister Rod Phillips introduced a $17-billion response package that includes an influx of cash for the health sector, direct payments to parents and tax breaks for businesses.
On March 26, a municipal state of emergency was declared in Kingston by Mayor Bryan Paterson due to two new cases of the virus announced by KFL&A Public Health. Three recent cases in the region had reported no prior close contact with known infected persons, causing health officials to conclude that community transmission is present in the region, and closures of several medical clinics. In addition, following California and British Columbia, takeout and delivery orders from restaurants can include alcoholic beverages as long as the order contains food items and is ordered between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m.
On March 27 at 2:00 p.m. ET, Alert Ready was activated on all radio stations, television channels and providers, and LTE wireless networks in Ontario, to distribute a warning informing travellers returning to Ontario of the mandatory self-isolation requirements under federal law.
In response to the anticipated increase in patients requiring critical care, the Ontario government announced on March 27 that over 3,000 ventilators are ready to be deployed in Ontario.
On March 30, the Ontario government extended the state of emergency through April 13, and also ordered the province-wide closure of all outdoor recreational amenities, including beaches, playgrounds and sports facilities. On March 31, it was announced that the schools would remain closed until at least May 4. The same day, Mayor of Toronto John Tory announced that the city would cancel all city-led major events, festivals, conferences, permits and cultural programs until June 30. Tory clarified that this does not necessarily restrict professional sporting events, but they are still covered under provincial restrictions on public gatherings.

April

On April 3, it was announced the number of "essential" businesses would be reduced to 44 beginning 11:59 p.m. on April 4; this included the halting of most non-essential construction, including industrial construction, and residential construction that did not begin before April 4, but excluding "critical" infrastructure projects, as well as the closure of all cannabis stores.
The same day, the government released extensive data modelling that claimed that public health measures in the province prevented an estimated 220,000 cases and 4,400 deaths up to that point. Between 3,000 and 15,000 deaths related to COVID-19 were predicted with the current public health measures over the course of the pandemic, compared to a total projected 100,000 deaths if no action were taken, and if further measures are taken, models showed projections as low as 12,500 additional cases and 200 additional deaths by the end of April. The models projected that by April 30 there would be 80,000 cases and 1600 deaths under the current interventions. In addition, the government projected a peak use of ICU beds of 1200 beds by April 18 under their best-case scenario.
On April 14 during an emergency session, the Legislative Assembly voted to extend the provincial state of emergency through May 12. Premier Ford also announced that public schools would not open on May 4 as previously planned, which was extended to May 31 on April 26.

May

On May 14, the Ontario government announced that it would allow some fields of business to re-open on May 19, subject to social distancing and other requirements. This includes golf courses, with clubhouses open only for washrooms and restaurants open only for take-out, marinas, boat clubs and public boat launches for recreational use, private parks and campgrounds, and businesses that board animals, such as stables, may allow boarders to visit, care for or ride their animal.
On May 19, it was announced that all public schools would not open until September.
On May 27, all existing public health orders were extended through June 9, 2020.
On May 30, the Ontario government announced a "COVID-19 recovery rate" for electricity effective June 1 to October 31. The new rate of 12.8 cents per kilowatt-hour replaces the "off-peak" rate of 10.1 cents per kilowatt hour that was in effect since March 24.

June

On June 1, Premier Doug Ford announced that the province will extend the state of emergency for another 28 days past the current expiration date of June 2, 2020.
On June 4, Minister of Economic Development Vic Fedeli announced the resumption of non-essential short-term rentals for "lodges, cabins, cottages, homes, condominiums and B&Bs" from June 5.
On June 8, Ford announced that the second phase of reopening would begin on June 12 for most Ontario health regions, including selected personal care services to resume business, places of worship, outdoor dine-in at restaurants, outdoor recreation, drive-in/drive-through venues for artistic and cultural activities, beach access at provincial parks, and malls. All are subject to social distancing and other requirements. The June 12 rollout excluded the core area of the Golden Horseshoe, and two health units part of Lambton and Windsor that house U.S. border crossings.
In addition, Ford announced that the cap on gathering sizes would be increased to 10 province-wide regardless of phase, and that there would be a moratorium on evictions through the end of August of small businesses which are eligible for the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance program.
On June 15, Ford announced that the second phase of reopening would begin on June 19 for the rest of Ontario with the exception of Toronto, Peel and Windsor-Essex.
On June 22, Ford announced that the second phase of reopening would begin on June 24 for Peel and Toronto, however, Windsor-Essex was still disallowed due to the outbreaks among migrant workers.
On June 24, Ontario extended the state of emergency to July 15 and Premier Ford stated that he is "hopeful that another extension of the Declaration of Emergency will not be needed."

July

On July 3, Premier Ford mentioned that he does not have a specific date for when Ontario can move to Stage 3 of reopening, saying he does not "have a crystal ball." He mentioned the surge in cases in the U.S. that have led to a pause or rollback of reopening plans in 19 states and said, "you see what's happening when you move too quickly, you see what's happening south of the border. We don't want that happening up here."
On July 8, the Ontario government extended the state of emergency for another week, until July 22.
On July 16, the government announced that provincial emergency orders will be extended until July 29.
On July 17, the province entered Stage 3 of reopening except for the Golden Horseshoe and Windsor-Essex.

Reopening plan

In May, the government of Ontario outlined a plan of reopening, based in three stages. Initially, all but a list of essential services could operate province-wide, with a restriction of gatherings of larger than five people. The province as a whole soon entered Stage 1 of reopening. On June 8, a vast majority of the province was given the go-ahead to enter Stage 2, as a regional approach to reopening was announced. On June 15, all but Toronto, Peel and Windsor-Essex were allowed to enter Stage 2 and as of June 24, all but Windsor-Essex was allowed to enter Stage 2.

Stage 1

Stage 1 includes eased restrictions on the following:
Industry/Retail
Outdoor recreation
Care/Household Services
Province-wide, regardless of their stage or not, were given some looser restrictions. Social gatherings were extended to include up to ten people. Places of worship are allowed to operate at 30% of their normal capacity.
Stage 2 allows certain businesses to reopen, with heavy restrictions:
According to the Ontario government's Framework for Reopening our Province, Stage 3 will include:
The following regions have put in place by-laws that require masks or face coverings in some or all public places:
North Bay Parry Sound Health Unit has yet to create this sort of policy. Parry Sound council will meet on July 13 to make them mandatory, if the unit refuses to act before that point. Milton has voted to push Halton to enact a mask rule. Porcupine Health Unit is encouraging mask use.

Statistics

Geographical distribution

Public Health UnitCasesResolvedDeathsRef
Algoma27270
Brant County 1411314
Chatham-Kent2331821
Durham Region1,7971,598181
Eastern Ontario 17615411
Grey-Bruce1181090
Haldimand-Norfolk45839732
Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District21318932
Halton Region91085525
Hamilton88882745
Hastings Prince Edward43385
Huron-Perth65585
Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington1091060
Lambton County29926325
Leeds, Grenville & Lanark District35530352
Middlesex-London66958557
Niagara Region85470964
North Bay-Parry Sound 37361
Northwestern 44420
Ottawa2,4811,948264
Peel6,7246,025316
Peterborough 95932
Porcupine 70618
Renfrew County & District30261
Simcoe-Muskoka65559336
Southwestern 122845
Sudbury & Districts 79662
Thunder Bay District 95921
Timiskaming 19180
Toronto15,37713,7721,150
Waterloo Region1,3851,227119
Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph52646537
Windsor-Essex County2,2751,44071
York Region3,2652,785251

Updated as of July 29, 2020.

Demographic distribution

Updated as of May 23, 2020.

Institutional outbreaks versus other spread

COVID-19 testing

can be used to track the prevalence and spread, to diagnose individuals for treatment, to identify infections for isolation and contact tracing, to screen at-risk populations, to clear exposed healthcare workers to return to work, and to identify individuals with potential immunity. The World Health Organization says that jurisdictions should aim to test every suspected case of COVID-19. Estimates and projections for testing rates needed each day in order to safely reopen economies have ranged from 150 in April, 1,500 in early June, to 6,100 in midsummer 2020, all per 100,000 people. Tests used in Ontario must be reviewed and approved by the federal government. On April 23, Trudeau identified broader testing as key to reopening the country, mentioning the target of 60,000 tests per day set by Dr. Theresa Tam, but warned that up to 120,000 per day may be required. In early May, Ontario was testing just over 16,000 people per day, equal to a testing rate of about 110 tests per 100,000 people each day. As of early May, a total of over 920,000 tests have been performed in Canada of which, 350,000 were in Ontario.

Types of tests

Virus-RNA tests

Diagnostic testing for COVID-19 in Ontario is conducted using a method called RT-PCR. A carefully produced and validated swab is used to collect a sample from a person's throat, back of the nose, or front of the nose. The swab is put inside a sealed container containing a medium that preserves the virus, which is sent to test-processing centres in the corresponding province or territory. At the centres, highly skilled technicians use large commercial machines from a variety of manufactures to process batches of tens to hundreds of samples at a time. The test chemically strips the RNA from the sample then mixes it with a test kit containing chemical reagents designed to detect RNA signatures of SARS-CoV-2. The sample is cycled between a set of temperatures to amplify the chemical RNA signature. This leads to processing times that range from 4 to 24 hours.
In early April, Ontario has contracted Spartan Bioscience Inc. from Ottawa to supply it with virus-RNA testing systems that process a single swab sample in 30 to 60 minutes. The contract was for 900,000 swab test kits, whereas the number of machines has not been disclosed. While these machines cannot process many samples in total, they have the advantage of being small and easy to use. Thus, they can be used to provide rapid results at the point-of-care. They are expected to be useful at border crossings, isolated communities, prisons, and care homes. On April 13, Health Canada approved this test but on May 3 the test was recalled due to unreliable results.

Serology tests

Ontario is performing experiments testing the performance of blood tests that look for antibodies to the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Antibodies do not form immediately upon infection, so these tests are not well-suited for detecting a current infection. However, they can potentially identify those who have been infected in the past.

Testing facilities

Public Health Ontario has six testing laboratories to which samples can be sent. The main laboratory is the top four floors of the MaRS Centre in downtown Toronto. As of early April, accounting firm KPMG has been contracted to organize all the labs in the province that are capable of microbial testing. In addition to the six public health labs, this includes 10 hospital networks and three private lab networks, including Dynacare and LifeLabs.

Testing access

Access to testing is set by Public Health Ontario who publishes a guidance document that defines the conditions for an individual to be tested. Conditions have included close contact with a test-confirmed case, recent travel, admission to hospital for serious symptoms, healthcare worker, longterm care home resident, etc. The set of conditions has been updated repeatedly from January to April 2020, at times reducing access and at other times increasing access to testing. Starting in March, the public health units across the province have opened over 70 assessment centres, which members of the public can visit if directed by a health professional. These range from mobile units, to walk-up locations, to drive-through locations. This diverts potentially infected people from hospitals and doctors' offices. If warranted, the centre will collect a swab from a visitor for testing. Swabs are also collected at hospitals and by public health officials, for example, at longterm care homes.
Since many cases are not tested, the number of test-confirmed cases, which are the infection numbers reported by the Ontario government, should not be misconstrued as the actual number of infections, which have been estimated to be substantially higher. Unlike some countries, the number of suspected or probable infections is not reported by the Ontario government.

Amount of testing

The displayed chart shows the number of tests performed per day, the daily backlog, and the percentage of positive tests in Ontario from March to May 2020. The WHO advises to test every suspected case. Positive test rates above 10% indicate that the testing is too targeted and the number of test-confirmed cases will not accurately indicate the prevalence of COVID-19 in the population. This 10% limit was exceeded on multiple days in early April. Since a relatively limited number of cases are tested, the actual number of cases will be much higher than the test-confirmed numbers.
In late March and April, Ontario was performing the lowest number of tests per capita of all the provinces. As of early May 2020, among the larger provinces, Ontario is second to Alberta and ahead of British Columbia and Quebec in daily tests per capita.
In mid-April, polling firms Forum Research and Mainstreet Research released results of a pair of surveys about COVID-19 symptom prevalence and testing. Four to five thousand Ontario households were randomly selected. Of them, 2% of households contained someone who had been tested by April 12, increasing to 5% on April 19, whereas the incidence of COVID-19 symptoms in a household decreased from one in five to one in seven households. The second survey indicated that one-third of Ontarians report an underlying condition that might aggravate a COVID-19 infection.

Testing capacity

Since January 2020, Ontario has been increasing its capacity to perform testing based on RT-PCR. Various factors have impeded this increase, including shortages of reagent chemicals for the RT-PCR machines and shortages of validated swabs. To tackle these challenges, labs have adapted. In particular, RT-PCR machines from multiple manufactures have been obtained, each of which takes different sets of chemicals. New suppliers of swabs have been found but each must be tested and validated to perform properly. Returning tests results to individuals is automated with an online portal.

Testing capacity projections

Date of ProjectionStated Current Capacity/DayProjection of Testing Capacity/Day
March 13, 20202,5005,000 by unspecified date
March 26, 20202,500Each week, an increase by 3 to 4,000 tests per day and 19,000 by April 17
April 9, 202013,00019,000 by April 29, 2020
April 10, 202014,0008,000 by April 15, 2020, 14,000 by April 29, and 16,000 by May 6, 2020
May 12, 2020unstated20,000 by unstated date

Backlogs

On March 18, The Toronto Star reported that test results announced by the provincial government were several days old, with turnaround times increasing from 24 hours to 4 days, leading the government to "making decisions based on old information". The province was only able to process around 2,000 tests per day by March 19, which caused the backlog. The backlog increased to over 8,000 unprocessed samples on March 24 with patients waiting at least four days for results, partially due to fact that private and university laboratories are not allowed to process samples.

Management of testing in Ontario

Officials for Public Health Ontario include the following individuals:
In early April, the Ministry of Health brought in a multinational accounting firm KPMG to assist in the organization and optimization of testing capacity in Ontario. Premier Doug Ford said on April 8 that he was losing his patience with Ontario's inadequate testing numbers, showing testing capacity was not being fully utilized. Later that day, the province appointed a former Toronto public health head, Dr. David McKeown to troubleshoot and rethink the province's response to the pandemic. The following day on April 9, amid mounting criticism of the province's testing, the president and CEO of Public Health Ontario Dr. Peter Donnelly temporarily stepped down for medical reasons and was replaced in the interim by Colleen Geiger, Public Health Ontario's chief of strategy, stakeholder relations, information and knowledge.

Long-term care homes

Background

On April 15, 2020, the Ontario Nurses' Association released a statement saying that long-term care homes pre-COVID-19 were already understaffed, but now they are in “crisis” mode. Prior to the pandemic, long-term care home staff who were part-time or casual staff were allowed to work at multiple locations, increasing the risk of transmission and spread between LTC homes. The province issued a new Emergency Order on March 28 that introduced temporary additional staff members to help in the facilities and allowed homes more flexibility in staff deployment. Many LTC homes in Ontario are considered old and small and feature shared bedrooms, increasing the difficulty in isolating sick residents from those who are well.

Inspections

On April 15, CBC reported that the Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care had conducted resident quality inspections at only nine out of 626 long-term care homes in the province in 2019, down from a bare majority in 2018 and larger proportions from 2015 to 2017. RQIs are proactive, unannounced and more comprehensive than the other main category of care home inspections in the province, complaint and critical incident inspections, where facilities know of the impending scrutiny in advance; the 2018 Long Term Care Homes Public Inquiry noted that "focusing only on specific complaints or critical incidents could lead to missing systemic issues.", 114 care facilities in Ontario had experienced COVID-19 outbreaks, and those that had multiple COVID-19 deaths last had their RQI in 2018 or earlier.

Outbreaks

As of April 7, Ontario reported that there are 51 long-term care homes in the province that are experiencing COVID-19 outbreaks, and by April 10, it had surged to 69 LTC homes in Ontario. Some LTC workers pointed to a lack of personal protective equipment as a cause of the outbreaks. By April 21, 121 outbreaks have been reported in long-term care homes.
On April 8, the Ontario Ministry of Health released directives to ramp up coronavirus testing and infection control. Also, new residents entering a home must be isolated for 14 days and tested within that period. The directives also require that all long-term care home staff and essential visitors for gravely ill residents wear surgical masks, "whether the home is in outbreak or not." LTC homes are expected to take "all reasonable steps" to follow the new long-term care rules. Prior to this directive, LTC staff were not required to wear masks or other PPE, and testing levels were considered low for at-risk seniors and LTC staff.
On April 28, Chief Public Health Officer Theresa Tam stated that as many of 79 percent of Canada's COVID-19 fatalities occurred in long-term care homes, with Ontario and Quebec accounting for most of the cases.
Assistance from the Canadian Armed Forces at five Toronto-area nursing homes, beginning in April, led to a report by the Brigadier General in charge documenting extreme conditions and abuse. The Ontario Ombudsman announced the launch an investigation into long-term care facilities on June 1.
, the following LTC homes in Ontario have 10 or more confirmed COVID-19 related deaths:
LTC HomeCommunityBedsConfirmed Resident CasesResident DeathsConfirmed Staff Cases
Orchard VillaPickering2330700
Camilla Care CommunityMississauga2360680
Downsview Long Term Care CentreNorth York2520640
Carlingview ManorOttawa3030610
Altamont Care CommunityScarborough1590530
Forest HeightsKitchener2400510
Hawthorne Place Care CentreNorth York2690510
Extendicare GuildwoodScarborough1690480
Isabel and Arthur Meighen ManorToronto1680480
Madonna Care CommunityOrleans1600460
Eatonville Care CentreEtobicoke2470420
Midland Gardens Care CommunityScarborough2990420
Seven OaksScarborough2490410
Humber Valley TerraceEtobicoke1580360
River Glen Haven Nursing HomeSutton1190360
Weston Terrace Care CommunityYork 2240340
Mon Sheong Home for the AgedToronto1050330
Villa Colombo Homes for the AgedYork 391<532<5
Chartwell Ballycliffe Long Term Care ResidenceAjax1000320
Ina Grafton Gage HomeScarborough1280310
Woodbridge Vista Care CommunityWoodbridge2240310
MontfortOttawa1280300
West Park Long Term Care CentreYork 2000300
Almonte Country HavenAlmonte820290
Pinecrest Nursing Home Bobcaygeon650290
Extendicare Laurier ManorGloucester2420250
Heron Terrace Long Term Care CommunityWindsor1400250
Anson Place Care CentreHagersville610230
The Village of Humber HeightsEtobicoke1920230
Chartwell Westbury Long Term Care ResidenceEtobicoke1870220
Cooksville Care CentreMississauga1920210
Villa Colombo Seniors Centre Kleinburg1600210
Royal Rose PlaceWelland960200
The Village of Erin MeadowsMississauga1800200
Sherbourne PlaceToronto1260190
Country Village Homes - WoodsleeSouth Woodslee1040180
Elm Grove Living CentreToronto1260180
Shelburne Long Term Care HomeShelburne600180
Trinity Village Care CentreKitchener1500180
ReachView VillageUxbridge100017<5
Erin Mills Lodge Nursing HomeMississauga860170
MarkhavenMarkham960170
Harold and Grace Baker CentreYork 1200160
Kipling AcresEtobicoke3370160
Élisabeth-Bruyère ResidenceOttawa710150
Hellenic Home - ScarboroughScarborough1280150
MacKenzie PlaceNewmarket930150
Extendicare ScarboroughScarborough1540140
Hillsdale TerracesOshawa2000130
Villa Leonardo GambinWoodbridge168012<5
Bradford Valley Care CommunityBradford2460120
Burton ManorBrampton1280120
Chartwell White Eagle Long Term Care ResidenceToronto560120
Extendicare BayviewNorth York2050120
Grace ManorBrampton1200120
Lakeshore LodgeEtobicoke1500120
Owen Hill Care CommunityBarrie570120
The Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health CentreOttawa4500120
Chartwell Aurora Long Term Care ResidenceAurora2350110
Kristus Darzs Latvian HomeWoodbridge1000110
Pinecrest Plantagenet600110
Garden Court Nursing HomeEtobicoke450100
Ukrainian Canadian Care CentreEtobicoke1520100
Villa ForumMississauga1600100
Vision Nursing HomeSarnia1460100
Wellesley Central PlaceToronto1500100

Criticism

Initial response

Regional public health experts suggested that Ontario's initial incremental response — adding new voluntary measures piece by piece — had been ineffective. Businesses of all sizes remained open, and unnecessary social contacts continued. Describing Ontario's efforts to battle COVID-19 as piecemeal and ineffective, Dr. Shanker Nesathurai, who was one of Ontario's 34 regional medical officers of health, urged his colleagues to band together and use more powerful measures to contain the pandemic than provincial leaders had endorsed by the third week of March. In an email, Dr. Nesathurai, who worked for Haldimand Norfolk Health Unit, wrote on March 19 that Ontario's response had undermined the province's attempt to contain the outbreak, as businesses remain open and travellers ignore advice to self-isolate.

Protests

On April 25, there were small protests totalling 200 protesters in front of the Ontario Legislative Building in Queen's Park, Toronto, demanding that Doug Ford end all emergency measures. Some of the protesters consider the coronavirus a hoax. Ford called them "a bunch of yahoos."
On May 2, there was another protest with 100 protesters in front of Queen's Park.