B.C. records 609 new cases of COVID-19 and 6 more deaths - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. records 609 new cases of COVID-19 and 6 more deaths

B.C. health officials announced 609 new cases of COVID-19 and 6 more deaths on Wednesday.

There are 422 people in hospital with the disease, 157 of whom are in intensive care

Pedestrians in the rain in Vancouver on Oct. 15. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

B.C. health officials announced 609new cases of COVID-19 and 6 more deaths on Wednesday.

In a written statement, the provincial health ministrysaid there are currently 4,748active cases of people infected with the novel coronavirus in B.C.

A total of 422people are in hospital, with 157in intensive care.

The provincial death toll from COVID-19 is now 2,137 lives lost out of 203,582 confirmed cases to date.

There are a total of 32active outbreaks in assisted living, long-term and acutecare, including outbreaks atMission Memorial Hospital, Chilliwack General Hospital, Queen's Park Care Centre in New Westminster, University Hospital of Northern B.C., GR Baker Memorial Hospital in Quesnel and Bulkley Valley District Hospital in the Northern Health region.

As of Wednesday,89.7per cent of those 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of aCOVID-19 vaccineand 84.7 per cent asecond dose.

From Oct. 19 to 25, people who were not fully vaccinated accounted for 64.1 per cent of cases and from Oct. 12 to 25,they accounted for 74.9 per cent of hospitalizations, according to the province.

So far, 8.1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered, including 3.9million second doses.

Test positivity high in northern region

Health minister Adrian Dix is urging caution as COVID-19 numbers stabilize, saying the northern region had a test positivity rate of 19 per cent on Wednesday compared with a rate of four to five per cent for the rest of the province.

Dix said the lowest test positivity rate of 2.5 per cent was in Vancouver Coastal.

He said the B.C. Vaccine Card has helped boost vaccination rates but 10.3 per cent of the population remains
unvaccinated, so the province will continue pushing hard to get that number down as influenza season approaches and flu shots are offered.

He said there is pressure on hospitalization rates and on critical care units from a high number of seriously ill patients, mostly those with COVID-19, being transported from the northern region to other areas.

Dix said 40 of the 155 patients who contracted the virus and are currently receiving critical care are under the age of 50, and all of them are unvaccinated.

3rd doses coming

On Tuesday, the B.C. government announced that everyone in the province who was eligible to receive two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine will now be receiving a third.

Between now and the end of the year, the immunization program will continue to provide third doses topeople who are immunocompromised, to residents inlong-term care, and to those in assisted living and rural and remote Indigenous communities.

Seniors aged 70 and over, all Indigenous people over the age of 12, long-term home support clients and seniors in independent living, and health-care workers who had a short interval between their first and second doses will also have the opportunity toreceive a third dose by the end of the year.

Starting in January, third dose availability will expand to clinically vulnerable individuals and health-care workers. From there, the rest of the remaining population will become eligible.

A plan to start vaccinating children between five and 11 is also expected to begin, pending Health Canada approval, though parents can already register their kids to get immunized.

British Columbians aged 12 and over who have not yet been immunized can register in three ways:

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story compared this week's new numbers to last week's and last month's. However, the comparison has been removed after Interior Health introduced a one-time accounting change to its hospitalization numbers on Tuesday.
    Oct 27, 2021 6:13 PM PT

With files from Courtney Dickson and The Canadian Press