Friday, May 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

COVID wave may have peaked in parts of B.C.: Henry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2022 04:52 PM
  • COVID wave may have peaked in parts of B.C.: Henry

VANCOUVER - COVID-19 modelling released by the British Columbia government shows challenging days ahead for the health-care system even though the latest wave propelled by the Omicron variant may have peaked in parts of the province.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Friday the wave has spread faster than previous ones and their research shows the top of the latest surge was likely reached last weekend.

However, the data also shows hospital admissions are expected to peak in the next week with a lag time of about six to eight days after community transmissions, she told a news conference.

"And that is going to be a challenging few weeks on our hospitals," Henry said. "The peak is coming."

The figures showed a decrease in infections in two health authorities, Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health, with a levelling off on Vancouver Island and a slight rise in the Interior.

Officials looked at various indicators including hospitalizations and testing for COVID-19 in wastewater to support the data.

Henry said infections in Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health, where the majority of people live in B.C., are driving the epidemic curve.

"Those have peaked around the 1st of January and are starting to go down, so we think that we hit the peak of community transmission in British Columbia probably this past weekend."

The data also showed actual infections could be three to four times higher than the official daily figures because testing capacities have hit their limit in the province.

Restrictions put in place on gatherings, events and facilities such as gyms, fitness centres and dance studios helped in levelling off cases, Henry said.

The limitations remain in place until Jan. 18, when updated guidance will be given. When asked if there was a change coming to the restrictions, Henry would only say she would answer that question on Tuesday.

The modelling showed Omicron has displaced the Delta variant as the primary driver of infections in the community and in hospitals in less than six weeks, which is consistent with data around the world.

Henry said the province is seeing people in their 20s and 30s in hospital, and 70 per cent of those in critical care have not been vaccinated in the past month.

There has also been an uptick in hospitalizations for those who are 70 and older, Henry noted.

Hospitalizations for children have also increased this week, she said, with nine kids in the zero-to-four age group admitted for COVID-19, although none required critical care.

"But this reflects, again, the fact that this virus is spreading widely in our community, and how important it is for all of us around young people, zero to four particularly, making sure that we're vaccinated, to do the best we can to protect them from transmission."

This virus behaves like an upper respiratory illness among children and tends to trigger asthma and other airway diseases and bronchiolitis, she said.

The disease is mild among children and guidelines for them are changing as more is learned about the virus and how it affects them, she said.

Because the government has hit the limit on testing, families won't know if their children have COVID-19.

In December, Henry reduced the requirement to self-isolate after a positive for COVID-19 test to five days for those who are vaccinated and don't have symptoms.

On Friday, she had new advice for parents.

"If your children are ill, please keep them home. If they have mild illness, they can return to school when symptoms have resolved and they're feeling better enough to do usual activities."

Henry said she realizes that people want clear, definitive and unchanging guidance.

"But COVID is not allowing for that," she said. "The virus is changing, and we need to adapt as well."

MORE National ARTICLES

Man dies during shooting at a Langley intersection, IHIT takes over investigation

Man dies during shooting at a Langley intersection, IHIT takes over investigation
The area surrounding the scene will be cordoned off for a significant amount of time. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) has been called and will be working in partnership with Langley RCMP.

Man dies during shooting at a Langley intersection, IHIT takes over investigation

Methane-reduction fund getting overhaul: Wilkinson

Methane-reduction fund getting overhaul: Wilkinson
The third round of applications for the $675-million onshore program of the Emissions Reduction Fund was initially set to close today, but it has been put on hold while Wilkinson's department tries to address some of those concerns.

Methane-reduction fund getting overhaul: Wilkinson

27 Sunwing party flight passengers back in Canada

27 Sunwing party flight passengers back in Canada
Federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos says about 27 of the 130 passengers on the Sunwing party flight to Mexico have returned to Canada. Duclos told reporters today the returning travellers were interrogated at the border, tested for COVID-19 and had their documents, including PCR test results, verified by authorities.

27 Sunwing party flight passengers back in Canada

People tapping other provinces for rapid tests

People tapping other provinces for rapid tests
Troy Weppler says he turned away from a post office employee in Saskatoon as he shoved a box of COVID-19 rapid tests into an envelope to send to family in British Columbia.

People tapping other provinces for rapid tests

Provinces likely to mull vaccine mandates: Duclos

Provinces likely to mull vaccine mandates: Duclos
Jean-Yves Duclos told a COVID-19 briefing on Friday that such a measure was not currently being contemplated in Canada, but his personal opinion was that the country would get there at some point.

Provinces likely to mull vaccine mandates: Duclos

Canadian accused of Trump threat denied cash

Canadian accused of Trump threat denied cash
Dabney L. Friedrich, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., today denied a motion from Pascale Ferrier for the return of the money, which was seized when she was arrested at the United States border in September 2020.

Canadian accused of Trump threat denied cash