Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. seniors' care staff must be vaccinated

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2021 01:19 PM
  • B.C. seniors' care staff must be vaccinated

British Columbia will now require all people working in long-term care and assisted living facilities to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says people living in such settings are at particular risk to COVID-19 and transmission from unvaccinated people has led to outbreaks.

Henry says the deadline for workers to get vaccinated is Oct. 12.

She says those staff who are not currently fully vaccinated will be required to wear masks at work until they get a dose.

The rules also apply to volunteers and personal care workers at the facilities.

The announcement comes as British Columbia's COVID-19 infection rate peaks to levels not seen since mid-May.

Henry says she knows the government is changing what it had previously planned in terms of vaccination, but the move will help seniors and elders have the quality of life that they deserve.

There are currently eight COVID-19 outbreaks in long-term care facilities in the province, including four in the Interior health authority, where the provincial health officer has tightened restrictions in the last two weeks.

The surge in cases in the central Okanagan has been attributed by health officials to the highly contagious Delta variant.

MORE National ARTICLES

Business lobby pushes to reopen Canada-U.S. border

Business lobby pushes to reopen Canada-U.S. border
Businesses and lawmakers in both the United States and Canada, perhaps sensing a shift in the narrative that has dominated the issue of cross-border travel for more than a year, are ramping up the pressure to ease their mutual restrictions.

Business lobby pushes to reopen Canada-U.S. border

Trudeau to attend G7 Leaders' Summit in person

Trudeau to attend G7 Leaders' Summit in person
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced he will attend in person the G7 Leaders' Summit from June 11 to 13 and the NATO Summit on June 14 followed by the Canada-European Union Summit in Brussels.

Trudeau to attend G7 Leaders' Summit in person

Vancouver home sales strong but no record in May

Vancouver home sales strong but no record in May
The super-heated housing market in Metro Vancouver cooled slightly in May but the Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board says sales still remained active.

Vancouver home sales strong but no record in May

Loaded handgun seized following traffic stop

Loaded handgun seized following traffic stop
 The officer initiated a traffic stop in the 7600-block of King George Boulevard and upon further investigation, a loaded firearm was located on the driver. The vehicle was towed, the driver was arrested and later released on an undertaking as the investigation continues.

Loaded handgun seized following traffic stop

Climate change health costs to balloon: study

Climate change health costs to balloon: study
The Canadian Institute for Climate Choices says effects on health are likely to be heaviest among those who are already disadvantaged.

Climate change health costs to balloon: study

Unmarked graves damage Canada's global reputation

Unmarked graves damage Canada's global reputation
William Schabas, a professor at Middlesex University in the United Kingdom, said Canada likes to champion itself as a human rights supporter, but the discovery will hurt its reputation and make many people look at its activism with an amount of cynicism.

Unmarked graves damage Canada's global reputation