Monday, June 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Care home outbreaks reminder of vaccination limits

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2021 08:38 PM
  • Care home outbreaks reminder of vaccination limits

Health experts say COVID-19 outbreaks in two long-term care homes in British Columbia after most residents and staff were vaccinated are a reminder of the limits of immunization.

Officials announced yesterday that one resident and one staff member tested positive for COVID-19 at Fleetwood Place, a long-term care facility in Surrey where 88 per cent of residents had been vaccinated.

The outbreak follows one declared Sunday at the Cottonwoods Care Centre in Kelowna, where 10 residents and two staff members tested positive despite 82 per cent of residents being immunized.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry has said vaccines are effective at preventing severe illness and death, but they don't necessarily stop all transmission, so masks and physical distancing remain important.

Horacio Bach, a University of British Columbia infectious diseases expert, says the first dose of vaccine generally provides protection after three weeks, but older people's immune systems may take longer to produce antibodies or may not produce them at all.

He also says it's possible that the cases are variants of concern, which vaccines may not be as effective against.

Bach adds it's important for the public to know that no vaccine prevents illness 100 per cent of the time, but the COVID-19 shots have been proven to be safe and very effective against serious illness and hospitalization.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada encouraging Iran to ship PS752 black boxes to France as soon as possible

Canada encouraging Iran to ship PS752 black boxes to France as soon as possible
Canada agrees with Iran's new pledge to send the black boxes from a downed Ukraine Airlines jetliner directly to France instead of Ukraine, and wants it to happen as soon as possible, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Friday.

Canada encouraging Iran to ship PS752 black boxes to France as soon as possible

Scheer wants Champagne, Trudeau to explain minister's two Chinese mortgages

Scheer wants Champagne, Trudeau to explain minister's two Chinese mortgages
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer called Friday for Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne to explain how his two mortgages with a Chinese state bank don't compromise his ability to handle Canada's tense relations with the People's Republic.

Scheer wants Champagne, Trudeau to explain minister's two Chinese mortgages

Air travellers to be checked for fevers at Canadian airports

Air travellers to be checked for fevers at Canadian airports
Air travellers will need to have their temperatures checked before they're allowed to board planes but the system will take months to set up, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Friday.

Air travellers to be checked for fevers at Canadian airports

CMHC re-assessing policies through a racialized lens to eliminate discrimination

CMHC re-assessing policies through a racialized lens to eliminate discrimination
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. acknowledged a lack of diversity in its ranks and its role in past racism on Friday as it pledged to overhaul how it does business.

CMHC re-assessing policies through a racialized lens to eliminate discrimination

Canada rebuts UN Security Council critics as Champagne to NYC for final push

Canada rebuts UN Security Council critics as Champagne to NYC for final push
Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is bound for New York City to join the final push for Canada's campaign for a seat on the United Nations Security Council.

Canada rebuts UN Security Council critics as Champagne to NYC for final push

Feds, farmers, remain far apart over impact of carbon tax on grain growers

Feds, farmers, remain far apart over impact of carbon tax on grain growers
The federal government says its analysis of the impact the carbon tax is having on grain farmers is based on numbers provided by the farmers themselves.

Feds, farmers, remain far apart over impact of carbon tax on grain growers