The Daily Courier

Bylands outbreak appears under control

- By RON SEYMOUR

The COVID-19 outbreak at a West Kelowna agricultur­al business has not spread significan­tly since it was first detected.

Since 19 foreign farm workers and domestic workers at Byland’s Nurseries tested positive for the coronaviru­s in late March, only one additional case has been detected. The twoweek incubation period for that outbreak has now passed.

“Interior Health is working very closely with the owners to make sure everybody is cared for and that they’re able to self-isolate or quarantine effectivel­y,” provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Monday.

The other community outbreak in the Okanagan also remains as a static situation, with only one case at the Okanagan Correction­al Centre near Oliver since early April.

“That outbreak remains under observatio­n. As we know, there is a 14-day incubation period† so there is ongoing testing and surveillan­ce being done at the Okanagan correction­al facility, but to date only one person has tested positive and there have been a number of negative tests in that outbreak response,” Henry said.

The situation is more serious at another B.C. prison, however. There are now 35 people associated with federal prison in Mission who have tested positive for COVID-19, and eight are now in hospital.

“We are working very hard to ensure that the transmissi­on within that facility will be contained,” Henry said. “Unfortunat­ely, as we talked about on Saturday, there was quite a lot of transmissi­on that happened before the outbreak was recognized and we are now seeing people who were exposed over the previous two weeks develop symptoms,” Henry said.

Across B.C., 45 more people have tested positive for COVID-19 since Saturday, bringing the provincial total to 1,445. Of those, 136 are in Interior, up one from Saturday.

Hospitaliz­ations in Interior Health remain low and stable, with 10 people being treated in hospital for COVID-19

But between Saturday and Monday, 11 more British Columbians have died from COVID-19, bringing the total to 69. The majority of those who’ve died have been residents of long-term care facilities.

Just over 900 of the 1,445 people who tested positive for COVID-19 have recovered.

Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix urged people to continue to observe rules on physical distancing, stay at home as much as possible, and limit trips to those that are essential.

“This is not forever, but it is for now,” Henry said of the regulation­s intended to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Henry said it’s too soon to say whether, and to what extent, the arrival of summer will affect transmissi­on rates.

“We’re at that transition zone right now . . . I really can’t tell yet,” she said. “The challenge we have is that this is such a new virus and there’s so little immunity to it, it may still continue at a lower level even if it wanes somewhat with the warmer weather.”

This week, Henry will present more detailed informatio­n on who has been most affected by COVID-19, with breakdowns on the ages and locations of B.C. patients, along with an update on possible virus trajectori­es.

While some jurisdicti­ons, particular­ly in Europe, are moving toward lifting some COVID-19 restrictio­ns, believing the disease peak has passed in their countries, there is no current timetable or any such easing in B.C., Henry said.

Many factors need to be considered, she said, such as the outbreak situation in other parts of North America.

“I will say that the basics, the hand hygiene, the safe distancing, the making sure our workplaces have enhanced cleaning, the working from home, those are things that are not going to change or a while,” Henry said.

“Those are things we’re going to have to be continuous­ly thinking about doing for the next coming months until we have enough herd immunity that we’re not going to get a dramatic increase, or a rapid increase in infections in our communitie­s,” Henry said.

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