Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver-area schools low risk for COVID-19: data

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2021 08:06 PM
  • Vancouver-area schools low risk for COVID-19: data

A health authority says data showing schools in the Vancouver area are a low risk for the transmission of COVID-19 supports keeping classes open.

Since schools reopened in September, Vancouver Coastal Health says it hasn't recorded a significant increase in COVID-19 cases among children aged five to 17.

It says school-aged children accounted for six per cent of its COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, despite representing 10 per cent of the population.

Medical health officer Dr. Alex Choi says the authority wants educators, school staff, parents and students to feel reassured that schools are safe.

From Sept. 10 to Dec. 18, the authority says about 700 students or staff in the region were diagnosed with COVID-19 and more than 90 per cent of those cases didn't result in school-based transmission.

Vancouver Coastal Health says in a statement that the "vast majority" of those students or staff contracted the virus at home or elsewhere.

Choi says the figures support keeping schools open.

"While we have seen a moderate increase in COVID-19 cases among young people since the end of October, this is reflective of the overall increase in COVID-19 cases in our communities," he says in a news release on Thursday.

"Schools are an essential determinant of physical, mental and emotional development. It is our utmost priority to ensure students can continue to attend school, despite the ongoing pandemic."

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute
Sipekne'katik First Nation says its people have a treaty right to fish at any time. Non-Indigenous fishermen say the First Nation is illegally fishing off-season.

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter
The home is located in a multi-unit building on Vauquelin Blvd. in St-Hubert, bordering a forest and not far from an airport.

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario
The news prompted Dr. Horacio Arruda, Quebec's public health director, to declare a second wave of COVID-19 had begun in the province.

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman
Fifty-one-year Gabriel Wortman took 22 lives on April 18-19 before police killed him at a service station in Enfield, N.S.

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman

Sea ice at second-lowest level in record

Sea ice at second-lowest level in record
The U.S.-based National Snow and Ice Data Centre has decided that today is likely to be when the overall level of sea ice across the Arctic stops melting and starts growing again.

Sea ice at second-lowest level in record

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.
A similar letter was sent to New Brunswick Environment Minister Jeff Carr.

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.