Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

438 new COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2021 11:48 PM
  • 438 new COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Dr. Bonnie Henry during her COVID19 daily update made a COVID-19 case correction  She addressed the media by saying past week's numbers are off. There are 254 extra cases over the last week. There are 438 new cases, 9 epi linked.

There have been 81,367 cases of COVID in BC. There are two new COVID deaths in BC. There have been 1365 deaths in BC connected to the virus. There are 8 assisted living or LTC outbreaks. There are 8 outbreaks in acute care.

There are 243 people in hospital with COVID, this includes 63 people in ICU. So far 75,255 have recovered from the virus. There are 4,679 active cases and 8,445 in self-isolation.

There are 22 new variant cases in BC. For a total of 182 variant cases. 8 are active cases. Nine total variant hospitalizations. Only 1 in hospital now. This includes 159 B117 (UK), 23 B1351 (SA).

Dr. Bonnie Henry explaining decision to extend gap between first and second doses. Says the vaccine strategy is the one that creates the greatest protection for the entire community. "Our focus is maximizing the number of people who are protected from the first dose."

Dr. Bonnie Henry - "We are following the science of vaccines. We are following efficacy. That is what we get from the clinical trials." 
 
Dr. Henry says they are now during effectiveness, which is the real world experience. Efficacy is based on the clinical trials. Says they are relaying on the BC CDC stand to understand how the vaccines are working 'in our population, in BC.' 
 
Dr. Henry says we don't need to rely on second doses before lifting restrictions if we have enough people protected. "That is our goal right now."
 
By the end of June, Dr. Henry says if everything goes as plan with Moderna/Pfizer it will be mid July, but other vaccines can push that into June.

On using Astrazeneca with late March/early April expiry, Henry says the vaccine is fridge stable and the province is confident they can use whatever they get.

On events and gatherings, Dr. Henry says no event should be happening at any establishment, including at restaurants. Any restaurant hosting an event or advertising an event is in breach of the Gathering and Events Order. We're not seeing transmission in regulated spaces when the rules are followed.

On adjusting Spring Break, Dr. Henry says they have been consumed by thinking about these issues. Minister Whiteside said earlier the province will not be moving spring break. Says they are looking for safe places for activities for kids for the break.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China
The Senate's ethics committee is recommending that a Conservative senator be censured for breaching the upper house’s ethics code when he accepted an all-expenses paid trip to China in 2017.

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools
Search warrants executed at three separate residences, led Surrey RCMP to the seizure of items stolen from Surrey schools during a series of break and enters.

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide
The federal government has released updated figures showing once again that Canadian veterans are at greater risk of suicide than those who have never served in uniform.

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says
The prices Canadians have reported paying for goods and services have been rising more than the official inflation rate, a senior Bank of Canada official says.

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge
Canada's top judge says some of the innovations that courts have embraced during the COVID-19 pandemic might become permanent.

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge

Too many visitors forces B.C. to shut park on Canada-U.S. boundary

Too many visitors forces B.C. to shut park on Canada-U.S. boundary
The British Columbia park that straddles the 49th parallel with Washington state will be closed because it's overwhelmed with visitors using it as a cross-border meeting point.

Too many visitors forces B.C. to shut park on Canada-U.S. boundary