Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

British Columbia Records Eighth Death From COVID-19, Cases Climb To 271

Darpan News Desk, 20 Mar, 2020 06:53 PM

    VANCOUVER - British Columbia has recorded an eighth death from COVID-19 as the number of infections climbs to 271 cases.

     

    Health Minister Adrian Dix said Thursday the latest person to die was a resident of the Lynn Valley Care Centre in North Vancouver, where six others have died.

     

    The province also announced 40 new cases of the novel coronavirus, with 17 people in hospital, nine of them in intensive care.

     

    Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said most of the cases are in the Vancouver Coastal and Fraser health regions.

     

    She said precautions everyone must take to protect each other are "not optional."

     

    "This is for everybody and we do have the legal authority to enforce it," she said, adding enforcement officers could enter businesses where a public health order limiting gatherings to 50 people is being ignored.

     

    "If you're somebody whose working in the community and you think it's OK to have a group of people in your business it can affect you and your family and your business as well if it were introduced in your community," Henry said.

     

    Anyone who can't follow the orders should shut down their business, she said.

     

    However, Henry said maintaining social distance in general must come with keeping a social connection, which could happen online, to prevent social isolation as anxiety over the spread of the virus increases so it's important for people to safely reach out to each other, including seniors.

     

    She encouraged people to go on "virtual coffee dates" and to get take-out meals as a way to maintain connections and get outside as well as take advantage of online education, exercise and tours of museums that have placed their collections online.

     

    While at least one community in B.C. has closed access to playgrounds, she said common sense must prevail as parents keep their kids from playing in groups and don't have play dates in order to prevent the virus from being brought home and passed on.

     

    Dix said the province has also eliminated the three-month waiting period for medical services for British Columbians returning to Canada to ensure people get the care they need.

     

    More than a million people around the province have used an online self-assessment tool to get information on symptoms and nearly 2,000 people called a COVID-19 phone line on Wednesday, while many more phoned an 811 health line, he said.

     

    British Columbia has declared both a provincial state of emergency and a public health emergency because of COVID-19.

     

    Vancouver city council followed the province with its own local state of emergency on Thursday.

     

    The city says the declaration allows staff to take additional measures in the battle against the virus including giving the city priority in acquiring clothing, equipment or medical supplies to cope with the pandemic.

     

    Mayor Kennedy Stewart said the bylaw gives the city the power to take things "a step further" if businesses continue to ignore orders to close as well.

     

    This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 19, 2020

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    HAVE YOU SEEN HIM: Surrey RCMP Looking For High Risk Missing 86-Year-Old GURNAM CHEEMA

    Cheema is described as an 86-year-old south Asian male, 5’6”, heavy build, with short white trimmed beard and brown eyes.

    HAVE YOU SEEN HIM: Surrey RCMP Looking For High Risk Missing 86-Year-Old GURNAM CHEEMA

    Transit Police Looking For South Asian Suspect In Violent Robbery

    Transit Police Looking For South Asian Suspect In Violent Robbery
    The suspect is described as a South Asian male, medium build, a shaved head with dark stubble and a clean shaven face.

    Transit Police Looking For South Asian Suspect In Violent Robbery

    Female Suspect Arrested And Charged After Suspicious Fire And Dead Body Found In Coquitlam Park

     A charge of indignity to a dead body has been laid with respect to a suspicious death investigation in Coquitlam.

    Female Suspect Arrested And Charged After Suspicious Fire And Dead Body Found In Coquitlam Park

    Former Special-forces Commander Named Military's Sixth Vice-Chief In Four Years

    Former Special-forces Commander Named Military's Sixth Vice-Chief In Four Years
    OTTAWA - The Canadian Armed Forces saw its top ranks shuffled Monday as former special-forces commander Lt.-Gen. Mike Rouleau was tapped to become the military's sixth second-in-command in four years, forcing several other moves down the line.

    Former Special-forces Commander Named Military's Sixth Vice-Chief In Four Years

    O'Toole Calls For 'War Footing,' Mackay Suggests Tax Changes To Address COVID-19

    O'Toole Calls For 'War Footing,' Mackay Suggests Tax Changes To Address COVID-19
    OTTAWA - Conservative leadership candidate Erin O'Toole called Monday for the country to be placed on "war footing" to combat the spread of COVID-19, the latest escalation of rhetoric in the race now thrown into flux by the rapidly evolving crisis.    

    O'Toole Calls For 'War Footing,' Mackay Suggests Tax Changes To Address COVID-19

    Study Says Few Workers Have Paid Leave, Qualify For EI If Off Job Due To Covid-19

    Study Says Few Workers Have Paid Leave, Qualify For EI If Off Job Due To Covid-19
    OTTAWA - New research says broad swaths of the Canadian workforce won't have access to paid leave from their employers or existing federal help should they be forced off the job due to COVID-19.    

    Study Says Few Workers Have Paid Leave, Qualify For EI If Off Job Due To Covid-19