Thursday, May 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. boosts flu shots in fall pandemic plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2020 09:12 PM
  • B.C. boosts flu shots in fall pandemic plan

British Columbia's fall and winter pandemic battle plan involves ramping up COVID-19 testing, contact tracing and a campaign to administer almost two million flu shots.

Health Ministry officials said Wednesday they have prepared the province for COVID-19 scenarios ranging from low to exceptional outbreaks and they are confident the health system can meet the challenges.

They said some of the preparations include being able to conduct up to 20,000 daily COVID-19 tests, hiring more than 600 additional contact tracers and purchasing more than 1.9 million doses of flu vaccine.

It will also focus on protecting older people, who are particularly vulnerable to COVID-19, with staff increases at long-term care homes and administering 45,000 high-dose flu shots for seniors.

Health officials say the plan represents responses to what the province has learned about preventing the spread of COVID-19 since March.

Premier John Horgan says the province is spending $1.6 billion on its pandemic plan, which will result in hiring an additional 7,000 people to work in the health-care system.

"Our pandemic plan has been working," he told a news conference. "We need to accelerate. We need to up our game."

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said B.C. has purchased its highest-ever number of flu vaccines to fight influenza.

"Our fall influenza plan is going to be on a scale we have not yet seen," she said. "We know how important it is to protect all from influenza."

Henry said influenza in the Northern Hemisphere usually starts in October and November and peaks in December and January.

MORE National ARTICLES

High risk sex offender to reside in Vancouver

High risk sex offender to reside in Vancouver
Vancouver Police are warning the public that high-risk sex offender, Michael Wayne Carpenter, will be residing in a correctional halfway house in Vancouver.

High risk sex offender to reside in Vancouver

WATCH: NO SUCH THING AS A COVID19 SECOND WAVE, INDIA’S WATER CRISIS

WATCH: NO SUCH THING AS A COVID19 SECOND WAVE, INDIA’S WATER CRISIS
WHO spokesperson Margaret Harris says there will is only one big wave, no evidence for a second wave,

WATCH: NO SUCH THING AS A COVID19 SECOND WAVE, INDIA’S WATER CRISIS

Ontario's pediatric hospitals release guide for full-time school

Ontario's pediatric hospitals release guide for full-time school
Ontario's pediatric hospitals have updated their recommendations for a safe return to school full-time, offering guidelines on the logistical challenges facing educators this fall.

Ontario's pediatric hospitals release guide for full-time school

Yukon allows residents to expand pandemic bubble

Yukon allows residents to expand pandemic bubble
Yukon is set to move into its next phase of managing the COVID-19 pandemic, easing restrictions on so-called family bubbles, social gatherings and sport

Yukon allows residents to expand pandemic bubble

St. John's archdiocese liable for abuse: court

St. John's archdiocese liable for abuse: court
Newfoundland and Labrador's highest court says the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of St. John's is financially liable for sexual abuse at the Mount Cashel orphanage in the 1950s.

St. John's archdiocese liable for abuse: court

Victims' families thank public for support

Victims' families thank public for support
Relatives of victims of the Nova Scotia mass shooting marched through the streets of Halifax on Wednesday to thank their supporters for helping them persuade Ottawa and Nova Scotia to call a full public inquiry into the killings.

Victims' families thank public for support