'It’s a human tragedy': 30 unvaccinated, 12 vaccinated COVID-related local deaths reported since August

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit has released more local data on COVID-related deaths and vaccination status.
WECHU acting medical officer of health Dr. Shanker Nesathurai said Thursday morning that since August, there has been 42 deaths related to COVID - 30 were unvaccinated people and 12 were vaccinated.
He says the small percentage of the people who are vaccinated and dying of COVID have concurrent health conditions.
"What we're seeing as a clinical trend in Windsor-Essex is, of the vaccinated people that are dying those people have significant medical comorbidity and examples of that is they had cancer that was treated in the past or they've had a stroke in the past," he says.
He says it’s tragic that some otherwise healthy unvaccinated people succumbed to the virus.
“We have a group of unvaccinated people that could have lived for a long time, many of them could have lived for a long time, save for the fact that they didn’t get vaccinated” says Nesathurai. “It’s a human tragedy, that we have people who are dying of a disease, that for the most part can be preventable, that death can be preventable.”
He says many of the deaths could have likely been prevented with vaccination.
"From a population, health and individual level, we have people who are dying, who don't need to die and it's well within our reach as a community to try and protect their health," he adds.
A woman in her 50s from the community is the latest death reported on Thursday. WECHU doesn’t release vaccination status of specific cases. In total, there were 478 COVID-19 related deaths reported in the region since the beginning of the pandemic in March, 2020.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Sask. RCMP issue Amber Alert for 7-year-old girl and 8-year-old boy
An Amber Alert was issued Monday evening by Shaunavon RCMP in Saskatchewan for seven-year-old Luna Potts and eight-year-old Hunter Potts.

Trump says FBI conducted search at his Mar-a-Lago estate
The FBI searched former U.S. president Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate as part of an investigation into whether he took classified records from the White House to his Florida residence, people familiar with the matter said Monday.
Actor, singer Olivia Newton-John dies at age 73
Singer and actor Olivia Newton-John, who was best known for playing Sandy in the film 'Grease,' has died at the age of 73, according to her husband.
RCMP has been using spyware tools for years and in more cases than previously reported, MPs told
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino and senior RCMP officers are defending the national police force's years-long and previously undisclosed use of spyware—capable of remotely accessing cell phone and computer microphones, cameras and other data—as part of dozens of major investigations.
Saskatoon woman who had been reported missing faces charges in U.S., Canada
Federal prosecutors in the United States have accused a Saskatoon woman of faking her own death and that of her son in what they describe as an elaborate scheme to illegally enter the country.
$1.4B in uncashed cheques sitting in CRA's coffers -- how to check if you're owed money
The Canada Revenue Agency says it will be sending e-notifications about uncashed cheques to 25,000 Canadians this month.
4 Muslim men were killed in Albuquerque. Here's what we know about them
After ambush-style shootings of three Muslim men and the recent killing of a fourth in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the Muslim community in the city is on edge and fearful.
Liberals planning temporary solution to dental care promise: CP sources
Sources close to the government's proposed $5.3 billion dental care program say the Liberals are planning a temporary solution that involves giving money directly to patients in order to keep their promise to the NDP while they work on a more permanent answer.
Bill Graham, ex-interim Liberal leader and post-9/11 foreign affairs minister, dies
Condolences from Canadian politicians past and present poured out Monday as they learned about the death of Bill Graham, who served as foreign affairs minister when the country decided against joining the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.