Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. doctors defend approach to COVID-19 data

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2021 05:41 AM
  • B.C. doctors defend approach to COVID-19 data

British Columbia’s top two doctors are defending the province's approach to releasing data on COVID-19 but say they'll provide more information about case counts in neighbourhoods rather than large health regions so it may be more helpful for the public.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and her deputy, Dr. Réka Gustafson, said Friday they wouldn't characterize data first released to the Vancouver Sun by someone at the B.C. Centre for Disease Control as "leaked" because it would have been available in some form later anyway. Documents from the centre show higher rates of COVID-19 in some parts of Surrey, for example, but Henry said the province has maintained the city — with a greater number of essential workers — has more cases. "If you look at our information, most of it, all of it actually, aims to provide the same level of granularity at the provincial level," Gustafson said. "It wasn't yet of the validation or the standards that we were necessarily ready to put it out proactively," she said, adding the goal in the coming weeks is to provide neighbourhood-level immunization and case counts at the same time so they can be compared with other areas.

Information about outbreaks is being used by local public health officials to take action and data are analyzed before being released so there wasn't an effort to keep anything from the public, Gustafson said.

Henry said the province has prioritized vaccination for workers in high-risk jobs, but there's also been an effort not to publicize areas with higher transmission of the virus to avoid stigma and racism. “We have seen repeatedly that there are people who are stigmatized, who have COVID, and we only need to look at the anti-Asian racism that we’re seeing, the anti-Indigenous racism that we're seeing. So it is about finding that balance and doing the best with the data that we have.”

She said that while COVID-19 data are available on First Nations, it can't be collected for ethnic groups, which the pandemic has revealed face systemic inequities including low wages across the country. However, that information is needed in order to better support various groups of people, Henry said, adding information on gender and occupations also needs to be collected and presented in a standardized way across the country so it could be reported to the Public Health Agency.

British Columbia reported 722 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday and seven more deaths, for a total of 1,602 fatalities. So far, 45 per cent of B.C. residents who are eligible for a vaccine have received at least one shot.

Anyone aged 49 and up can now book an appointment as part of the province’s age-based stream of the vaccination program, which is also providing vaccines to younger people in hot spots while ramping up immunization for front-line workers.

MORE National ARTICLES

Infrastructure bank won't spend fast enough: PBO

Infrastructure bank won't spend fast enough: PBO
Budget officer Yves Giroux's report says the only way for the agency to meet the goals the government has set for it would be through a rapid increase in spending.

Infrastructure bank won't spend fast enough: PBO

MPs to debate Port of Montreal back-to-work bill

MPs to debate Port of Montreal back-to-work bill
Workers at the port have been without a contract since December 2018 and started to refuse overtime and weekend work earlier this month.

MPs to debate Port of Montreal back-to-work bill

Docs reveal delay in closing 'gap' in refund rules

Docs reveal delay in closing 'gap' in refund rules
Emails between Transport Canada and the Canadian Transportation Agency reveal that back in May 2020, officials highlighted regulatory blind spots around reimbursing passengers whose flights were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Docs reveal delay in closing 'gap' in refund rules

Father of Alberta teen says she died from COVID-19

Father of Alberta teen says she died from COVID-19
Ron Strate of Magrath, Alta., says his daughter Sarah was healthy and active when her health deteriorated Monday, and she died soon after arriving at the hospital.

Father of Alberta teen says she died from COVID-19

B.C. man pleads guilty over penthouse party

B.C. man pleads guilty over penthouse party
Mohammad Movassaghi was sentenced today to one day in jail, a $5,000 fine and 18 months' probation after previously pleading guilty.

B.C. man pleads guilty over penthouse party

Gaming job kept following him: Rich Coleman

Gaming job kept following him: Rich Coleman
Rich Coleman told the public inquiry into money laundering that former premiers Gordon Campbell and Christy Clark appointed him minister responsible for gaming for reasons that ranged from experience to political seat shuffling when other people left the post.

Gaming job kept following him: Rich Coleman