Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ADVT 
National

153 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Darpan News Desk BC Government, 10 Jun, 2021 03:08 PM
  • 153 COVID19 cases for Thursday

British Columbia's top doctor says she's confident more COVID-19 restrictions can be lifted next week as planned due to dramatic declines in cases and because the person-to-person transmission rate has dropped.

Dr. Bonnie Henry says fewer infections reflect the power of vaccines, with nearly 73 per cent of eligible residents aged 12 and up having had their first shot.

However, only about eight per cent of those 18 and over have received both doses of a vaccine as the province pushes for more people to register for a second shot.

B.C. is expected to move to the second of its four-step reopening plan next Tuesday, when, among other things, indoor and outdoor personal gatherings of up to 50 people will be allowed.

A return to travel within the province, high-intensity indoor group exercise and team sports are also part of the next step, and Henry says increased contact is expected to cause a rise in manageable clusters of the virus.

There are 153 new cases of COVID-19. There have been 145,996 total cases of COVID in BC. The 7-day rolling case average falls to 161 cases per day. When the restart plan was announced May 25 the rolling average was 329.

Of the new cases, 21 are in the Vancouver Coastal Health region, 73 are in the Fraser Health region, 11 are in the Island Health region, 39 are in the Interior Health region, and 9 are in the Northern Health region.

There are currently 1,910 active cases of COVID-19 in the province. Of the active cases, 176 individuals are currently hospitalized, 49 of whom are in ICU.

There have been 4 new COVID-19 related deaths, for a total of 1,729 deaths in British Columbia.

British Columbia is projecting COVID will be nearly entirely wiped out by September if vaccination uptake continues to be high and contacts are at 70% of normal.

Dr. Henry with modelling says Grand Forks leads the way in BC with transmission rates by 100k of population at about 16 per 100k. The deaths have remained low throughout the third wave. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks
Mike Farnworth described the checkpoints as a type of "counterattack," often used to find drunk drivers, but this time meant to discourage recreational travel outside of a person's health authority.

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks

Meng gets OK to delay final hearings

Meng gets OK to delay final hearings
The hearings were scheduled to begin Monday but Meng's lawyers said they needed more time to review documents related to the case obtained through a Hong Kong court.

Meng gets OK to delay final hearings

Goodale appointed Canada's new commissioner in UK

Goodale appointed Canada's new commissioner in UK
Goodale will advise Trudeau on how the two countries should work together to beat the COVID-19 pandemic, fight climate change, pursue post-Brexit trade and build back after the pandemic.

Goodale appointed Canada's new commissioner in UK

ICU pressures mount as COVID fells younger people

ICU pressures mount as COVID fells younger people
British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario have been giving AstraZeneca to people as young as 40 and in Quebec as young as 45.

ICU pressures mount as COVID fells younger people

Freeland urges patience on reopening border

Freeland urges patience on reopening border
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair on Tuesday extended restrictions on non-essential travel from overseas and across the border with the U.S. for another month.

Freeland urges patience on reopening border

National AstraZeneca advice delayed by new data

National AstraZeneca advice delayed by new data
NACI was minutes away Tuesday afternoon from providing an update to its advice that AstraZeneca shouldn't be given to people under the age of 55 but the planned briefing was called off.

National AstraZeneca advice delayed by new data