COVID-19 hospitalizations in B.C. begin to rise as province braces for early flu season - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:50 AM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

COVID-19 hospitalizations in B.C. begin to rise as province braces for early flu season

Health officials in B.C. reported an uptick in people in hospital with COVID-19 this week. The province is encouraging people to get a booster dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and will also be offering free flu shots after the Thanksgiving long weekend.

367 people are currently in hospital with the virus, 30 in critical care

Travellers at Vancouver International Airport in Richmond, British Columbia. B.C. health officials say they're expecting a surge in COVID-19 and flu cases through the fall and winter seasons. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

COVID-19 hospitalizations in B.C. are upthis week, bucking a general downward trend that started in late July.

The B.C. Centre for Disease Control reported 367 peoplein hospital with the virus Thursday, an increase of 20 per cent from last week's numbers when there were 305 people in hospital. Thirty people arein critical care.

Provincial health authorities reported 16new deaths linked to COVID-19, bringing the total number of COVID-related deaths since the beginning of the pandemic to 4,283.

The government says the weekly numbers it sharesare preliminary andare often changed retroactively due to delays in the count anda new methodtheprovince uses to measureweekly cases, hospitalizations and deaths.

Deaths are now calculated based on whether they occurred within 30 days of a positive COVID-19 test, whether or not the coronavirus has been confirmed as theunderlying cause. The centre says it is evaluatingthe cause of each person's death retroactively to better understand "true COVID-19 mortality.''

Last week, the province reported 22 deaths between Sept. 11 and Sept 17 but has since revised that number upwards to 31.

B.C. also reported 635new COVID-19 cases from Sept. 11 to 17, an increase of two cases from the previous week's data.

The province says the countlikely underestimates actual case numbers as most people are testing themselves, and there are fewer lab-reported tests.

The B.C. Centre for Disease Control says SARS-CoV-2 viral loads measured in wastewaterat fiveMetro Vancouvertreatment plants are down overall.

Over the past 10 weeks, levels atthe Annacis Island facility covering Fraser North and South dropped by 60 per cent, and viral loads at the IonaIsland treatment plant decreased by 57 per cent.

SARS-CoV-2 levels atthe northwest Langley facility were up by nine percent over the past week; viral loads atthe Lulu Island plant covering Richmondhave beenunchanged over the last five weeks.

The BCCDC continues to exclude data from the Lion's Gate plant in Vancouver, as numbershave been more variable than expected, and officials are still trying to determine what's behind that.

Officials bracing for early flu season

On Thursday, Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix said B.C. is preparing for a simultaneous increase in COVID-19 and flu cases in the coming months.

Henry saidbased on what Australia and New Zealand experienced during winter in the southern hemisphere,B.C. could see influenza start to spikein November and December rather than itsusual peak in January.

"We've had very little to almost no influenza for the last few years," said Henry. "That means there's a cohort of young people who have never been exposed."

Henry promised free flu vaccines will soonbe availablefor those at high risk, with distribution to the general population forthose six months and older beginning Oct. 11, after the Thanksgiving long weekend.

Dix said B.C. has already started planning for potential staff and bed shortages in the health-care system, including moving hospital patients into community care and increasing the speed of home care placement.

The province's projections show an additional 700 COVID-19 patients and up to 1,200 additional influenza patients could require treatment in hospital over the course of the fall and winter seasons.

"While actual volumes are hard to predict, we have to prepare for all scenarios, including the most difficult," Dix said.

Health officials are strongly recommending people who are eligible get both a fall booster and flu shotto protectthemselvesand the health-care system.

A booster campaign offering a new COVID-19 bivalent vaccine doselaunched in early September.

With files from Justin McElroy and the Canadian Press