Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. records 738 new COVID-19 cases, 13 deaths

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2020 01:12 AM
  • B.C. records 738 new COVID-19 cases, 13 deaths

Provincial health officials say they are working on British Columbia's plan to handle COVID-19 vaccines.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, the provincial health officer, says Dr. Ross Brown of Vancouver Coastal Health will join the group working to organize the logistics around the distribution of vaccines.

B.C. recorded another 13 deaths and 738 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, bringing the total to 29,086.

The province also issued a correction for nine days of case totals in the Fraser Health region, revising Tuesday's COVID-19 case count to 706 instead of 941.

Henry says front-line workers as well as those in long-term care homes will likely have priority for vaccinations.

She cautioned that while the province has contracts with vaccine makers, there can be challenges with offshore manufacturing.

"It's very much focused on who is most at risk and how do we protect them best," Henry said. "There's a lot of discussion that needs to happen."

Henry said they hope to have vaccines by January 2021.

She said she was surprised at how quickly the virus has spread during the fall, and health restrictions imposed across the province last week are an attempt to deal with the sudden surge in cases.

Henry urged people to think of the impact COVID-19 is having on health-care workers, particularly those at Burnaby General Hospital, where an outbreak has led to 55 patients and 40 hospital staff contracting the virus.

She also pushed back against those who oppose B.C.'s mandatory mask requirements, over claims it impacts their personal freedoms.

"I have no time for people who believe that wearing a mask somehow makes them ill or is a lack of freedom. It’s a sign of respect," she said.

Henry's call for compassion came on the same day the BC Coroners Service reported 162 overdose deaths for October.

The number of overdose deaths has become "unacceptably high," she said, while urging residents to show compassion to drug users, and drug users not to take drugs alone.

MORE National ARTICLES

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports
The safety board issues the caution in its report into a January 2019 incident where the container vessel Ever Summit hit a crane while being piloted into the Vanterm terminal in the Port of Vancouver.

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act
Mak Parhar owner of Bikram Yoga in Delta where hot yoga classes are conducted was in the news in the Spring time for spreading misinformation about COVID19 suggesting that the virus cannot survive in hot temperatures. 

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid
In a message posted on social media, Coun. Melissa De Genova says she successfully delayed her motion until sometime in March 2021.

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron
The incident marked the third gruesome attack in five weeks that French authorities have attributed to Muslim extremists, amid a growing furor over caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that were republished by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy
Public health officials and politicians are asking "every" Canadian to get vaccinated against influenza so that hospitals overwhelmed by COVID-19 don't also get hit with a flu-season tsunami.

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding
Today, the City of Surrey welcomes and is grateful for the nearly $15 million in federal and provincial funding from the COVID-19 Safe Restart Grant for Local Governments.

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding