Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. moves to weekly COVID-19 reporting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2022 03:45 PM
  • B.C. moves to weekly COVID-19 reporting

VICTORIA - The British Columbia government has made the switch to providing COVID-19 updates on a weekly rather than daily basis, saying the change aligns with a shift away from a case-management model to a surveillance model.

A Health Ministry bulletin says the weekly reports will focus on identifying meaningful changes in key COVID-19 measurements and trends over time.

It also says that reporting on deaths is changing to count all deaths that occurred within 30 days of the person's positive lab result, regardless of whether the underlying cause of death was found to be linked to COVID-19.

Until now, whenever someone with a confirmed case of COVID-19 died, their death was reviewed to determine whether the cause was the infection.

The ministry says the new, "broader definition" means some deaths will be reported that aren't actually related to COVID-19.

It says the reports will be posted on the B.C. Centre for Disease Control website on Thursdays with data spanning the previous Sunday to Saturday.

There will likely be a one-time increase in the number of people ever hospitalized with the move to "broader administrative data," it notes.

Information on COVID-19 cases will be based on a person's first molecular or PCR test through the province's medical services plan, the ministry bulletin says.

The first weekly report covering March 27 to April 2 shows 11 people died, a measure of "30-day all-cause mortality," while 193 people were admitted to hospital with COVID-19 and a total of 1,706 new cases were confirmed.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. deficit lower than forecast at $5.5 billion

B.C. deficit lower than forecast at $5.5 billion
Finance Minister Selina Robinson says the final numbers show a deficit of $5.46 billion compared to the original forecast of almost $8.2 billion.

B.C. deficit lower than forecast at $5.5 billion

Health agency wants five years to answer request

Health agency wants five years to answer request
The applicant recently asked the Public Health Agency of Canada for emails, texts and messages that president Iain Stewart had sent or received from June 14 to 21.

Health agency wants five years to answer request

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work
The March briefing note to Filomena Tassi estimated the annual employer costs would likely be $1.17 million to provide free tampons and pads, based on an annual, per-employee cost of almost $60 and assuming a 50-per-cent take-up rate.

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers
When an unprecedented heat wave "cooked" the cherries growing at his family's farm in Oliver, B.C., Pravin Dhaliwal tried to see past the financial loss to the passion that spurred him to follow in the footsteps of his father and grandfather.

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules
The U.K. announced today that fully vaccinated travellers in the U.S. or Europe will not have to quarantine on arrival to the U.K. The changes are set to go in place at 4 a.m. on August 2.

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.
A crew of 34 specialists from Australia is set to bolster the 208 out-of-province personnel working alongside more than 3,000 firefighters and others on B.C.'s fire lines, he said.

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.