Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. To Focus On Care Homes In COVID-19 Fight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2020 12:42 AM

    VICTORIA - British Columbia will put more focus on enhancing prevention of the novel coronavirus at long-term care facilities to protect vulnerable elderly people and staff, the provincial health officer said Wednesday.

     

    Dr. Bonnie Henry said more screening of employees and visitors will be done at the facilities, which will be off limits to groups of people visiting loved ones.

    "One of the things that has become apparent to us is how fragile our long-term care system is and how we need to be doing more to enhance our prevention for people in long-term care and our assisted living facilities," Henry told a news conference.

     

    She said visitors should stay away if they have any respiratory illness. Previously, people were advised to phone long-term care homes ahead of time if they had a cold, for example.

     

    "I won't say we're stopping visitors, but (there will be) restriction of visitors and making sure nobody comes in that has any respiratory infection," Henry said. "We want to make sure we don't do things like have group sessions where people are interacting with multiple people."

     

    She said visitors should take care to only visit their family member and then leave the premises.

     

    "You make sure you take all the precautions that we know are important for preventing transmission of infection, like cleaning our hands and really, really, particularly, staying away if you are ill."

     

    The province has 46 cases of COVID-19, including the first case on Vancouver Island. Henry said the Vancouver Island patient is a man in his 60s who travelled to Egypt.

     

    Seven of the newly diagnosed people include two workers at a long-term care home where four other employees have been infected. The North Vancouver facility is also where a man in his 80s died earlier this week.

     

    Henry said the Lynn Valley Care Centre is the only long-term care facility in B.C. that has had a positive test for COVID-19.

     

    Three of the new cases are linked to Egypt and include a visitor in his 70s whose relatives in the Fraser Valley are now also in isolation, she said.

     

    Henry said she has the power to order the closure of schools in B.C. under the Public Health Act, but so far she doesn't believe that's necessary, especially if people keep their distance from each other, wash their hands frequently and stay home if they're sick.

     

    "There's a whole lot of pros and cons involved in closing schools, which we are continually evaluating," she said. "It really is a matter of judging it as it comes."

     

    Henry said she can also order the cancellation of public events in B.C., including sporting events, but she has yet to use her powers.

     

    Some organizers have postponed or cancelled events on their own, including the B.C. Council of Forest Industries, which has scrapped its annual convention in Prince George from April 1 to 3.

     

    Earlier Wednesday, Premier John Horgan held a conference call with faith leaders from different denominations to discuss the outbreak with Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix.

     

    Horgan said he wants faith leaders to be as up-to-date as possible about the government's efforts to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus because people often turn to them for comfort, aid and advice.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.c. Announces Seven New COVID-19 Cases, Including Two More Care Home Workers

    Dr. Bonnie Henry, the provincial health officer, announced the infections among seven new cases Tuesday, bringing the provincial total to 39.    

    B.c. Announces Seven New COVID-19 Cases, Including Two More Care Home Workers

    Trudeau Says Government Eyeing Ways To Curb COVID-19 Spread As Pandemic Declared

    Multiple health authorities reported a flurry of new positive tests for COVID-19, including one person at Canadian Forces Base Trenton repatriated from a cruise ship docked in California, and a man in Sudbury, Ont., who attended a large mining conference in Toronto.

    Trudeau Says Government Eyeing Ways To Curb COVID-19 Spread As Pandemic Declared

    Kenney Worried Layoffs Coming As Oil And Gas Sector Struggles With Coronavirus

    CALGARY - Premier Jason Kenney says time is of the essence as he takes demands for more aid to Alberta businesses to the first ministers meeting in Ottawa this week.

    Kenney Worried Layoffs Coming As Oil And Gas Sector Struggles With Coronavirus

    Retired Vancouver-Area Lawyer Criminally Charged Following Stock Market Investigation

    Retired Vancouver-Area Lawyer Criminally Charged Following Stock Market Investigation
    A retired Vancouver-area lawyer has been charged following a B.C. RCMP Integrated Market Enforcement Team (IMET) investigation into a multi-million dollar stock market-related scheme.

    Retired Vancouver-Area Lawyer Criminally Charged Following Stock Market Investigation

    Woman Dragged From Car In Penticton After Interrupting Theft: Police

    On March 9, 2020 at 1:39pm, Penticton RCMP received multiple calls of a woman screaming on Kinney Avenue while she appeared to be fighting with a man.   

    Woman Dragged From Car In Penticton After Interrupting Theft: Police

    Vanderhoof Police Investigate Suspicious Death

    Vanderhoof Police Investigate Suspicious Death
    On Monday March 9 2020 at approximately 1:57 PM, Vanderhoof RCMP were called to a local residence for a check well-being call.

    Vanderhoof Police Investigate Suspicious Death