Close X
Sunday, February 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

17 COVID deaths over 3 days

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Apr, 2021 10:05 PM
  • 17 COVID deaths over 3 days

British Columbia has confirmed that COVID-19 was a factor in the death of an infant from the Interior Health region, the province's top doctor says.

The baby was being treated in hospital in January and the BC Coroners Service has since determined COVID-19 was a factor in the death, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry told a news briefing on Monday.

Henry reported the baby's death while addressing concerns raised in Ontario that more people are dying at home after contracting COVID-19.

The coroners' service in B.C. has a process in place to investigate whether the illness was a factor in any sudden and unexpected deaths, she said.

The service has investigated several hundred of those deaths since last March and a "very small" number have been linked to COVID-19, she said.

One of the deaths was the infant, now the youngest person to die from COVID-19 in the province, Henry said.

Health officials have been working with the coroners' service as COVID-19 cases rose in recent weeks and they have not seen an increase in sudden deaths that should be investigated as possibly linked to the illness, she said.

"So far we're not seeing that happen here, but we will continue to pay attention," Henry said, urging people to seek medical care if they need it.

Seventeen more people died from COVID-19 in B.C. since Friday, pushing the death toll to 1,571, she said.

B.C. has detected 2,491 new cases of COVID-19 over a three-day period and 484 people are in hospital with the illness, including 158 in intensive care.

Just shy of 8,200 cases are active in B.C. and more than 12,000 people are under public health monitoring after exposure to confirmed cases.

The number of contacts that each person has while infectious has come down since B.C. tightened health restrictions, but the circulation of more transmissible variants continues to elevate the risk, Henry said.

"Before, if somebody got sick from a contact they had at work and came home to their family, there might have been one or two other people in the family that caught it. But now we're seeing everybody get it," she said.

"We are still seeing that transmission is primarily related to social connections in people's homes, where they have groups of people, when they're meeting with groups of people indoors," she said.

More than 1.6 million doses of vaccine have been administered in the province so far, including just over 89,000 second doses.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. budget needs future vision: business

B.C. budget needs future vision: business
The business community was looking for more signs of a post-pandemic focus, said Bridgitte Anderson, CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.

B.C. budget needs future vision: business

Maclean’s ranks Delta as the best city in Metro Vancouver

Maclean’s ranks Delta as the best city in Metro Vancouver
Following two years in a row as Metro Vancouver’s second best community, Delta’s strong community-based response to the pandemic helped it achieve top spot this year.

Maclean’s ranks Delta as the best city in Metro Vancouver

Shooting at Langley Sportsplex leaves man in his 40s dead

Shooting at Langley Sportsplex leaves man in his 40s dead
The Langley Sportsplex houses ice rinks, daycares, and gymnasiums and was open at the time of the shooting.

Shooting at Langley Sportsplex leaves man in his 40s dead

862 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

862 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
1,456,946 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca-SII COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 88,335 of which are second doses.

862 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

JetBlue spreading wings with service to Canada

JetBlue spreading wings with service to Canada
The New York-based airline says it will launch flights between Vancouver and New York, as well as seasonal service to Boston, starting in the summer of 2022.

JetBlue spreading wings with service to Canada

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks
Mike Farnworth described the checkpoints as a type of "counterattack," often used to find drunk drivers, but this time meant to discourage recreational travel outside of a person's health authority.

Police group pushes back on B.C. roadblocks