B.C. sheds new light on where and how COVID-19 is spreading, as health officials announce 68 new cases - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. sheds new light on where and how COVID-19 is spreading, as health officials announce 68 new cases

Public health officials in British Columbia provided new information Thursday about where COVID-19 cases have been found in the province and how they are spreading.

As of Thursday, B.C. has 906 active cases of COVID-19 infection

B.C. provided new information about the novel coronavirus Thursday in a map detailing the spread of COVID-19 in the province by local region and in some cases, by municipality. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Public health officials in British Columbia provided new information Thursday about where COVID-19 cases have been found in the province and how they are spreading.

At a news conference held Thursday in Victoria, the province introduced a newmap breaking down the location of COVID-19 caseswithin each of B.C.'s health authorities.

B.C.Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix also reported 68 new cases of the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, as well as one more death,a person in long-term care living in the Fraser Health Region.

The death toll from the disease now stands at204 people.

There are 906 active cases of infection in B.C., up from 896a day earlier. Twenty-twopeople are in hospital, seven of them in intensive care.

New map shows where cases found

Henry saidgoing forward, the province will maintain a more granular map ofCOVID-19 case locations. To date,information has generally been limited to how many cases have been found within each of B.C.'s health authorities.

On Thursday, Henry presented a map she said would be updated periodically showingmore specificallywhere new cases are arising.

Tap on the map for a closer look

Henry said there was a reluctance to release this information earlier in the pandemic because the number of cases wasso small that it would make people identifiable in some communities.

"We want to give as much information as we can," Henry said. "It doesn't tell the whole story. it doesn't talk about the people who didn't have a test and it also doesn't reflect, necessarily, where somebody was exposed to COVID.

"And it doesn't reflect those people who have been quarantined all over the province because they've been exposed in one place or another."

How itspreads

Henry was asked about those exposure venues and said while she didn't have exact information, she had a "rough" breakdown about where transmission ishappening.

About one-third ofcases being seen now, she said, are related to events like parties, clubs and nightclubs.Another third is related to transmission within families. The final third is related to exposure inworkplace clusters or outbreaks in long-term care.

She added about 20 per cent of cases overall are related to international travel but that proportion has declined.

"It varies over time," she said.

The important thing, Henry said, is whether experts can trace those cases and link people who have been potentially exposed.

"It's those unlinked cases that we are most concerned about," Henry said. "We still are finding people quickly, we are linking people quickly. Less than 20 per cent of our cases are unlinked. We investigate those very carefully."

No new health care outbreaks

Thursday's update brings the total number of cases detected in the province to 5,372. Of those,4,253 people have recovered.

Public health officials are monitoring and following up with2,810 people who are or were close contacts of confirmed cases.

There were no new outbreaks in health care reported Thursday.

There are 11 active outbreaks, nine in long-term care or assisted living, one in acute care and one at a hospital.Overall, atotal of 432 residents and 282 staff have tested positive in health-care settings. The outbreak atthe Arbutus Care Centre in Vancouver has been declared over.

A new community outbreak has been reported in Elkford, B.C., in the East Kootenay. Henry said it was at a construction site run by Teck Resources and there is no risk to the community.

Seven cases have been connected to the outbreak, Henry said. Six of the people who tested positive reside in Alberta and the outbreak was detected after they returned home.

MIS-C reports

Henry reported for the first time on suspected cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children and adolescents (MIS-C)whichshe said has been associated with COVID-19in some parts of the world.

MISC, Henry said, is very similar to Kawasaki Disease, a rare childhood condition.Previously, only cases in whichthe child tested positive for COVID-19, or was a close contact of someone with COVID-19, would bereported. But now suspected cases are being reported.

B.C. has had eight suspected cases, she said, but none of the children tested positive for COVID-19, had COVID-19 antibodiesor had known exposures toCOVID-19 cases.

The median age of the children was four years old. Five were male, three were female. All were taken to hospital including two who went into intensive care. B.C. Children's Hospital reported all eight cases.

All have recovered, she added.

"These are serious illnesses," Henry said. "But this is a reflection of the fact that our system works. We have been monitoring this across B.C. and we will continue to monitor it particularly as we move into the coming months, with things like schools opening."

Henry added later thatMIS-C can be caused by factorsother than COVID-19.

School questions

Henry spent some time answering questions about the pending start of school.

She said while there are likely to be some cases resulting from the resumption of classes, she is confident they can be managed with contact tracing and precautions called for in reopening plans.

Henry said the prevalence of the virus in B.C. remains low and contact tracing is working. Officials will continue to watch community spread.

"It's going to be okay. We're going to work through this," she said.

With files from Bethany Lindsay and Ben Mussett