I think the most important updates decision-makers or Canadians want to hear is where we are at and whether things are getting better. I think all of our indications are that the epidemic is definitely slowing down.
One of the things that we looked at was the rate of drop in cases. The case counts over the last seven days compared to the previous seven days have dropped by about 13%. When we looked at what we call the doubling time, the epidemic showed exponential growth at the beginning, so the doubling time was about three days, which is very fast. Now it is almost an irrelevant indicator because it's now over 30 to 60 days, so that tells you that the rate of increase or doubling is definitely slowing down.
There is one indicator that everybody is interested in, which is what we call the effective reproduction number. This looks at whether one Canadian transmits to fewer than one Canadian, in which case the chain of transmission will break.
This number at the national level is less meaningful than perhaps looking at a regional level, because we have regional epidemics, but right now it is below one. Below one is where we want it to be. We want to see it really below one, and that is sustained in terms of that trajectory, but it is very different in different provinces.
Many jurisdictions have no community transmission or have the epidemic under control, but, we are keeping an eye on Ontario and Quebec, because the two provinces account for about 85% of cases and 94% of the deaths. Looking at their rate of the slowing down of the cases and their hospitalizations and deaths is extremely important as we look at this.
Basically, with the regional epidemic in mind, which is different, all provinces are showing a decline, basically, in their projections. Again, my message is that we are optimistic, but we must be very, very cautious, because in this next phase, if we ease the measures.... Again, modelling will show different scenarios as to how much of a release in these public health measures one can afford to do. You've seen some of that from British Columbia as well. The modellers are very much all working really hard at this. Really, it's the final epidemiology where, if we do see cases reignite, we will have to leap on them really, really fast. That is the premise of the testing and contact tracing.