Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

564 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2021 12:05 AM
  • 564 COVID19 cases for Thursday

British Columbia's provincial health officer says the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine will be given to first responders and essential workers, but it still needs to be determined which industries will be included.

Dr. Bonnie Henry says the first shipments of the recently approved vaccine are expected in the province next week and the B.C. Immunization Committee is developing a detailed plan of who should be immunized and when.

However, she noted essential workers and first responders are a "very broad group," and the B.C. Immunization Committee is now reviewing who should be prioritized to receive the vaccine and when.

"We've come to recognize through this pandemic how many people absolutely are essential workers, are people who cannot work from home," she said at a COVID-19 briefing on Thursday.

The committee is the provincial equivalent to the National Advisory Committee on Immunization and uses public health principles, vaccine science and an ethical framework to reach decisions on vaccine distribution, she said.

She says she expects the plan will be finalized around March 18, and in the meantime, the initial supply will be used to address ongoing outbreaks that are leading to rapidly increasing case numbers in some communities.

Henry also apologized to long-term care residents and health-care workers whose second dose of Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was suddenly postponed this week after B.C. decided to extend the gap between first and second shots to four months.

"I know that came as a shock for many people. I regret that our communications weren't able to keep up as fast as the decision-making," she said.

She says the decision was not taken lightly, but it did need to be made quite rapidly because the province was approaching a time when tens of thousands of second doses were scheduled to be given.

That would have left the province with very little vaccine to protect other community members, she said.

“That dose you didn’t receive on Tuesday, or Wednesday, or today, is now being administered to a community member, to another member of our family," Henry said. "Ultimately it will bring us all closer to getting to our post-pandemic world."

Henry reported 564 new COVID-19 cases and four additional deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities linked to the virus to 1,376, and she also says two of those who died had variants of concern.

There were 46 new confirmed cases of variants of concern, bringing the total to 246. The majority of those cases, a total of 218, are the variant first found in the United Kingdom, while 28 are the strain first detected in South Africa.

Public health officials can't identify transmission chains for 25 per cent of the cases involving variants, Henry said.

A private school in Port Coquitlam has shut down for three weeks after exposure to a variant. Fraser Health said it was working closely with Archbishop Carney Regional Secondary School and it will reopen March 29.

The province also released Thursday a written strategy on rapid testing, which says the tests will continue to be used in community settings, in situations where quick results are needed to guide immediate public health action and in areas with increased risk of transmission or outbreaks.

Henry said B.C. started to receive rapid tests in October, but it needed to do quality assurance in November and December before starting to use them. Since then, the province has done 39 pilot projects, including in long-term care facilities and rural and remote locations, she said.

Rapid tests have also been used to supplement the gold-standard polymerase chain reaction tests in schools, for example when a variant of concern was detected in Garibaldi High School in Maple Ridge, she said.

She said health officials have learned that rapid tests are less useful for screening people without symptoms, and more useful in areas where there is an outbreak or community transmission is higher.

The rapid tests are low-cost, but they need to be done in a health-care environment and are also less accurate than the gold-standard tests, she said.

As the province moves into a time when it is vaccinating more people and starting to open things up, it's looking at which industries might benefit from having rapid tests available, such as food processing plants where outbreaks have happened, Henry said.

"We are in a new place right now in our COVID-19 pandemic," she said. "We're getting our regular supply of vaccines and more vaccines are on the way."

 

 

 

 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

$16.5M settlement in G20 class-action lawsuit

$16.5M settlement in G20 class-action lawsuit
A decade-long legal battle over mass arrests at the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto has come to a close after police and hundreds of protesters and others reached a $16.5 million settlement.

$16.5M settlement in G20 class-action lawsuit

Five things about Conservative leadership

Five things about Conservative leadership
The federal Conservative party will announce the winner of its leadership contest on Aug. 23.

Five things about Conservative leadership

Amber Alert launched in P.E.I. for 12-year-old girl

Amber Alert launched in P.E.I. for 12-year-old girl
 An Amber Alert has been issued following the possible abduction of a 12-year-old girl in Prince Edward Island.

Amber Alert launched in P.E.I. for 12-year-old girl

Lawsuit to challenge Quebec back-to-school plan

Lawsuit to challenge Quebec back-to-school plan
A group of parents are moving forward with a legal challenge aimed at forcing Quebec to offer remote learning services to families who don't want their children returning to classrooms during the COVID-19 pandemic this fall, the lawyer representing them said Monday.

Lawsuit to challenge Quebec back-to-school plan

First Nations accuse DFO of systemic racism

First Nations accuse DFO of systemic racism
Five British Columbia First Nations are challenging a federal decision on salmon fishing in their territories this year, and they are accusing federal fisheries officials of systemic racism in the way they have been treated.

First Nations accuse DFO of systemic racism

Calgary woman swept away in B.C. river dies

Calgary woman swept away in B.C. river dies
A Calgary woman has died after slipping into a river and being swept away in B.C.'s Kootenay National Park.

Calgary woman swept away in B.C. river dies