The Miracle

Health officials announce 66 new cases of COVID-19 in B.C., no new deaths

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VICTORIA -- Health officials in British Columbia announced 66 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the province Thursday, bringing the provincial total to 725 cases. There have been no new deaths from the novel coronaviru­s in British Columbia over the last 24 hours, said provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry in her daily update on the pandemic.

In Henry’s previous update, she announced one new death in B.C. and 42 more positive tests. The province’s death toll stands at 14, while a total of 186 people have fully recovered from the virus, according to Henry. Of B.C.’s 725 cases, the vast majority remain in the Lower Mainland. Some 359 are in the Vancouver Coastal Health region and another 241 are located in the Fraser Health region. Those two regions include all of Metro Vancouver as well as surroundin­g areas as far away as Whistler and Hope. Those two health regions are also the site of nine outbreaks at seniors’ care homes in the province. On Thursday, Henry said there had been no new outbreaks at such facilities, but a few new cases had been confirmed. At Lynn Valley Care Centre in North Vancouver, where the majority of the province’s deaths from COVID-19 have occurred, four additional residents and three additional staff members have tested positive for the virus, Henry said. There have also been three more positive tests at Haro Park Centre in Vancouver. Two of them are residents of the facility, while the third is a staff member.

Henry said Thursday she has issued a new provincial health order aimed at minimizing the spread of the coronaviru­s between long-term care facilities. The order assigns health-care workers to a single facility for the duration of the pandemic, rather than allowing them to work at multiple facilities, which had been the case in the past. Health officials have known workers travelling between seniors’ care homes is a problem for weeks - since the Lynn Valley outbreak began. On Wednesday, Henry said it took time to develop an order prohibitin­g people from working at multiple facilities because of the “patchwork” nature of employment for those individual­s, with some working for facilities directly, others working for private contractor­s and others working for the public health system.

“That is one of the things that has facilitate­d movement and outbreaks in a number of different facilities, unfortunat­ely, so far in British Columbia,” Henry said. “So this will be really important to help support those workers to be able to work and to maintain the support that we need in those facilities while decreasing that risk.” Elsewhere in the province, there are 62 people who have tested positive for COVID-19 in the Interior Health region, 52 in the Island Health region and 11 in the Northern Health region.

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