Penticton Herald

B.C. cuts vax timelines

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VICTORIA — COVID-19 outbreaks in pockets around British Columbia have prompted health officials to shorten their recommende­d delay between vaccinatio­ns by three weeks.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry announced the change Monday, saying reducing the interval from 49 days to 28 will help boost the level of community protection in areas of the province that are experienci­ng outbreaks.

Notices will be sent out to about 170,000 people in the coming days, asking them to book their second-dose appointmen­t.

The optimal time to wait for the second shot is six to 10 weeks for stronger protection, but that must be balanced with the risk of getting COVID-19 during the interval, said Henry, adding those who aren't in risky jobs or in a current hot spot may want to wait longer than 28 days.

“I am very confident that two doses, from the evidence that we see, still provide very high protection, though we know that for some people their immune systems may not respond as well,” Henry said.

More restrictio­ns were imposed last week due to a spike in COVID-19 cases in the Central Okanagan, shutting down nightclubs, and limiting liquor sales and gathering sizes.

The province reported 1,079 new cases over a three-day period ending Monday, with more than half of them located in the Interior region. There were also five more deaths, pushing the death toll to 1,777.

More than 70 per cent of those 12 years and up in the province are fully vaccinated, leaving more than 830,000 who have not had their shots.

There are 68 people in hospital, including 20 in intensive care.

Henry said most of the latest COVID-19 infections are among unvaccinat­ed people, but when the more infectious Delta variant gets into high-risk settings, such as care homes, it can spread rapidly to those who are immunized.

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