Saturday, May 17, 2025
12.4 C
Kelowna

On Air

Share

NewsB.C. COVID19 update March 24

B.C. COVID19 update March 24

B.C. confirms another 145 COVID19 cases, with outbreaks at 2 new seniors’ homes

Health officials have confirmed another 145 cases of COVID-19 in British Columbia, which includes infections at two more seniors’ homes in the province.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry announced the new cases during her daily virus briefing Tuesday, but added that another 73 COVID-19 patients have also recovered.

That brings the total number of recoveries to 173 out of 617 infections in British Columbia.

“That’s 28 per cent of our total cases, and I think that’s a really positive thing,” Dr. Henry told reporters. “It shows us that most people – particularly young, healthy people who have milder illness – are able to be managed at home and are recovering from this.”

Officials also pointed to international research indicating that people who recover have an immunity to the virus. Dr. Henry said previous patients appear to be safe for a “few weeks to months” at least.

The provincial health officer noted the large jump in cases announced Tuesday covers almost two days worth of testing, since Monday’s virus briefing was held hours earlier than usual.

Henry said 67 of the new cases were tested from Sunday afternoon to Monday afternoon, and another 78 were tested over the last 24 hours.

The number of deaths related to the virus in B.C. also remains at 13.

But COVID-19 has now spread to another two care homes in the province: Little Mountain Place Residential Care & Housing Society in Vancouver and the Evergreen Heights assisted living facility in White Rock.

At this point, just one staff member at Little Mountain and one resident at Evergreen Heights have been confirmed to be carrying the virus.

“The outbreak protocols are being implemented at both those facilities and continue at the other long-term care and assisted living facilities where we have identified outbreaks,” Henry said.

That brings the total number of outbreaks at long-term care homes and assisted living facilities up to eight. The most serious remains the ongoing outbreak at Lynn Valley Care Centre, where 42 residents and 21 staff have been infected.

Henry said the growing number of affected homes highlights the risks involved in having staff members work at multiple facilities at once, potentially carrying COVID-19 to different locations across the region – an issue she said officials hope to have resolved by the end of the week.

“We are doing a concerted effort across the province to now sort that out so we can assign people to a specific long-term care home, particularly through this pandemic, and that is something that is being undertaken as an urgent issue,” Henry said.

–with files from CTV News–

 

- Advertisement -

In The News

- Advertisement -

Related