Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

P.1 likely highest in B.C. due to testing: doctor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2021 12:35 AM
  • P.1 likely highest in B.C. due to testing: doctor

British Columbia's top doctor says the province likely has Canada's largest proportion of COVID-19 cases involving the more transmissible variant first identified in Brazil, but that's partly because it is testing more for that strain.

Dr. Bonnie Henry said Thursday the Vancouver Coastal region is leading all other health authorities with about 70 per cent of P.1 variant cases because of a large number of cases linked to the resort town of Whistler.

Overall, just under 60 per cent of daily cases involve variants, including the one first associated with South Africa, though those cases are negligible compared with P.1 and the variant first identified in the United Kingdom.

Henry said the higher risk of transmission with variants prompted the three-week "circuit breaker" imposed last month that included closing indoor dining at restaurants and bars.

The B.C. Restaurant and Food Services Association has said restrictions are expected to be continued beyond the three-week period that is set to expire next Monday.

Travel between communities is driving higher cases of COVID-19, especially with more transmissible variants in indoor settings, Henry said as B.C. had a record 409 people in hospital, with a peak of 125 patients in intensive care.

Hospitalizations are highest among B.C. residents in the 40-to-59 age range and those between 60 and 79, she said, adding the province is aiming to vaccinate people in those groups as fast as possible.

The province reported 1,205 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, and three more deaths, for a total of 1,524 fatalities.

"Your probability of being exposed to somebody is higher now because we have higher rates of transmission in the community. So, if I am seeing a group of 10 people, the probability that one of them has the virus ... the potential to spread it to me right now is higher than it's ever been," Henry said.

While the risk of becoming infected has risen, stopping transmission requires following restrictions already in place such as gathering indoors only with people from the same household, she said.

Calls for closing schools in some regions are not backed up by data, Henry said, adding cases have increased after vacation periods such as spring break through more contact in the community but are still relatively low.

About one in 200 school-aged children between the ages of five and 18 have required hospitalization, a fraction compared with adults, the data show.

Between January and the first week of March in the Fraser Health region, for example, less than one per cent of students and staff tested positive from a total of 315,000 people in schools that were tested. Staff represented 83 per cent of cases.

Henry said 267 of the positive cases, or 13 per cent, were likely contracted at school and when transmission occurred in that setting, a single case typically led to one other case in the school and no transmission occurred in about 85 per cent of schools in the region.

During the same period, 16,053 cases were reported in Fraser Health, data show.

"It certainly is something we continue to pay attention to and we know how distressing it is when we have exposure events."

Health Minister Adrian Dix said about 26 per cent of people eligible for a vaccine in B.C. have so far received at least one dose, with Wednesday representing a record day for the number of immunizations in the province.

While the province has a considerable supply of hospital beds and equipment such as ventilators, staff are feeling the pressure of more hospitalizations, Dix said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee
Michigan has refused to concede that the state's own experts have concluded there are no clear alternatives to the pipeline, he wrote to the governor in a letter earlier this year.

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie
Sonya Savage also says it’s critical to push back constantly against any false narrative that casts Alberta’s wellspring industry in a negative light.

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19
The event was to take place in Surrey on April 24th. The Surrey Vaisakhi parade is the largest in Canada and outside of India drawing crowds in excess of over half a million. 

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity
The notice says these fall somewhere between relatively common events such as seasonal floods and highly improbably risks such as an asteroid hitting Earth.

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid
O'Toole says a Conservative government also wouldn't cut aid funding, but would place a greater focus on measuring outcomes associated with that money.

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI
The decision reverses a recommendation made by the body two weeks ago when the panel of vaccine experts said AstraZeneca hadn't included enough people over the age of 65 in its clinical trials.

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI