Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Protective Equipment Supply 'Wicked Problem,' Says B.C. Health Officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Mar, 2020 07:59 PM

    VICTORIA - British Columbia has cleared hospital space for almost 4,000 possible COVID-19 patients, but potential shortages of personal protective equipment for health workers has become "our wicked problem," provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Wednesday.

     

    The supply of masks, gloves and medical gowns doctors, nurses and other health workers use to protect themselves while treating patients is running low, she said at a news conference.

     

    "The burn rate is much more than we expected," said Henry. "That's our wicked problem. We are on a tenuous level now, but we have a plan for that. There are things we will be doing over the next coming days."

     

    She said health officials are considering stockpiling, reusing and searching globally for more protective equipment.

     

    "We are actively looking at getting as much as we can," said Henry, who also mentioned using alternate supplies, but did not elaborate.

     

    Health Minister Adrian Dix has previously said B.C. has adequate supplies of protective equipment, including respirators and ventilators for patients. He also said more supplies have been ordered and were expected to arrive shortly.

     

    Henry reported 42 new B.C. cases of COVID-19 Wednesday and one death, raising the province's total to 14 deaths. B.C. now has 659 COVID-19 cases, she said.

     

    Most of the cases, 547 people, are those who live in the Lower Mainland, Henry said. There are now 47 cases on Vancouver Island, 46 in the Interior and nine COVID-19 cases in B.C.'s north, she said.

     

    Henry said 64 people are in hospital, of which 26 people are in intensive care. But she said 183 people have recovered from novel coronavirus.

     

    She also said she is keenly awaiting patient data over the next week or 10 days to determine if the province's physical distancing and self-isolation efforts are working.

     

    "What we are seeing today is people who test positive are people who have been exposed to the virus 10 days to 14 days ago," she said. "I do want to see that dramatically decreasing."

     

    Her orders for people to physically distance themselves, self-isolate and wash their hands frequently are aimed at keeping the virus from spreading, she said, adding next week's patient numbers could start showing success.

     

    "It's a bit of a dance right now," Henry said. "What I want to see is these numbers starting to come down over the next coming days."

     

    She said she has concerns about a possible spread of COVID-19 in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

     

    Many of the residents of the community have underlying health conditions and may be more vulnerable to having severe illness from the virus, Henry said.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Remove Taxi Boundaries: Surrey Board Of Trade Tells The Province

    The Surrey Board of Trade is changing the public narrative for the taxi industry around partnership and innovation.

    Remove Taxi Boundaries: Surrey Board Of Trade Tells The Province

    David Eby Calls On BC Liberals To Stop Withholding Money Laundering Documents

    David Eby Calls On BC Liberals To Stop Withholding Money Laundering Documents
    The BC Liberals are refusing to release all relevant cabinet documents to the Cullen Commission into money laundering, BC Attorney General David Eby disclosed today.

    David Eby Calls On BC Liberals To Stop Withholding Money Laundering Documents

    RCMP Looking For Couple Who Were Driving Nissan Altima With Paper Alberta Licence Plate

    Wanted: Unknown couple in Port Coquitlam. May have access to a colour photocopier. Last seen driving a grey 2005 Nissan Altima with a paper Alberta licence plate.  

    RCMP Looking For Couple Who Were Driving Nissan Altima With Paper Alberta Licence Plate

    Teck Resources Shares Down After Company Pulls Frontier Oilsands Project

    VANCOUVER - Shares in Teck Resources Ltd. are trading down almost five per cent after the company said it has withdrawn its application for a massive oilsands mining project, citing uncertainty over climate change policies.    

    Teck Resources Shares Down After Company Pulls Frontier Oilsands Project

    Seventh Case Of COVID-19 Diagnosed In B.C.

    VICTORIA - A seventh case of the novel coronavirus has been diagnosed in British Columbia.

    Seventh Case Of COVID-19 Diagnosed In B.C.

    B.C. Money Laundering Inquiry To Begin Amid Hopes For Answers, Accountability

    B.C. Money Laundering Inquiry To Begin Amid Hopes For Answers, Accountability
    VANCOUVER - British Columbia's attorney general hopes an inquiry into money laundering will answer lingering questions about how the criminal activity flourished in the province and identify those who allowed it to happen.    

    B.C. Money Laundering Inquiry To Begin Amid Hopes For Answers, Accountability