'It's getting scarier': 108 cases of COVID-19 and climbing in northern B.C.'s Nechako region - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:25 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

'It's getting scarier': 108 cases of COVID-19 and climbing in northern B.C.'s Nechako region

Between Nov. 18 and Dec. 17 there have been 108 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the Nechako Local Health Area a region with fewer than 13,000 people. That means nearly one per cent of the population has been infected within a month.

First Nations Health Authority has taken over a hotel where people can self-isolate, chief says

The Stuart Lake Hospital in Fort St. James is a small acute care centre in northern B.C. Patients with serious cases of COVID-19 are being sent to hospitals in Prince George and Vanderhoof. (Taylor Hansen Photography)

Health officials and First Nations leaders are urging people to stay vigilant over the holidays in one of the regions of B.C. hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Between Nov. 18 and Dec.17 there have been 108 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the Nechako Local Health Area a region with fewer than 13,000 people. That means nearly one per cent of the population has been infected in a month.

"It's getting scarier," said Nak'azdli Whut'en elected Chief Aileen Prince in a video update. "We had started to see a definite bend in the curve, and flattening. We are now going back up again."

Prince said her members are trying to deliver food to people in isolation and while that briefly dipped below twenty people "nowit's back up over forty again." Northern Health says there are currently 65 active cases among residents of the region.

Northern B.C. generally has seen a major spike in COVID-19 cases since November, recording the highest hospitalization and critical care patient rates per capita in the province. Positivity rates in the Northern Health region the number of positive cases for every 100 tests administered have climbed to more than ten per cent.

And numbers released by the First Nations Health Authority reveal that Indigenous people in northern B.C. are being disproportionately affected, with infections in First Nations occurring at twice the rate of the rest of the population.

The Nechako local health area, which includes Vanderhoof, Fort St. James and Fraser Lake, has seen a surge in COVID-19 cases. More than 108 positives were recorded btween Nov. 18 and Dec. 17. As of Dec. 18, 65 were considered active. (B.C. Centre for Disease Control)

Many of the new infections are intheregionwest of Prince George, including Fort St. James.

On Dec. 9, B.C. Emergency Health Services dispatched a rapid response team to Fort St. Jamesto help with the volume of ambulance calls. Over an eight-day period, the team responded to more than 100 calls more than half of which were for patients needing to be transferred to other regions for higher care.

The rapid response team left on Wednesday but an extra ambulance along with two paramedics from Vancouver Island will remain in the community until Dec. 24.

Prince said she is hearing ambulances daily, including helicopters transporting COVID-19 cases to hospitals where they can receive intensive care. She also said the First Nations Health Authority has taken over a local hotel wherepeople canself-isolateand is urging her members not to let their guard down.

"We're kind of worried that we're going to see more spikes after Christmas break," she said in an interview with CBC. "Keep the course ... there's light at the end of the tunnel."


Subscribe toDaybreak NorthonCBC Listenor yourfavourite podcast app, and connect with CBC Northern British Columbia onFacebook,TwitterandInstagram.

With files from Nicole Oud and Betsy Trumpener