Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Eight New COVID-19 Cases In B.C., But Province Says Jump Expected

Darpan News Desk, 06 Mar, 2020 07:59 PM

    VICTORIA - British Columbia has announced eight new cases of COVID-19, including the first apparent community transmission of the virus in the province.

     

    Dr. Bonnie Henry, the provincial health officer, said Thursday the case of a woman in the Vancouver area is of particular concern because she did not travel recently and has had no known contact with anyone else diagnosed with the novel coronavirus.

     

    "This is a community case and we are doing a detailed investigation right now to try and determine where her source of infection was," said Henry, adding the woman was initially tested for influenza.

     

    "She has not recently travelled and has no known contact with any of our known cases of COVID-19. That's something we are paying a lot of attention too, of course."

     

    Henry said officials are doing "disease detective work" to determine the source of the woman's infection.

     

    "There's likely at least one other person out there who has this disease or had this disease, and we need to find them," she told a news conference.

     

    Henry said the number of new cases announced Thursday is not surprising, but there are heightened concerns about the possible community transmission and another case involving a woman from Seattle who was visiting family in B.C.'s Lower Mainland.

     

    Health officials in B.C. and Washington state are also working to determine the woman's contacts and movements, Henry said.

     

    "Clearly, that is of concern with us and we are working with our neighbours to the south in Washington state to try and determine where her exposure might have been," she said.

     

    Seattle reported at least eight COVID-19 deaths this week.

     

    Henry said four of the new cases in B.C. are people with close household contacts of previously announced cases. Those cases involve a man in his 20s, a man in his 30s, a woman in her 50s and a woman in her 60s.

     

    The other cases involve two people who recently returned to B.C. from travel to Iran, she said. Henry said the woman in her 50s and the man in his 60s both live in the same home.

     

    She confirmed one of the new cases involves a student at a private university in downtown Vancouver.

     

    University Canada West said Thursday the school was informed of a presumptive case of COVID-19 a day earlier and it is taking precautionary steps by keeping the campus closed for three days.

     

    The student with a presumptive case of the novel coronavirus was visited by the person's father, who tested positive for COVID-19 after an overseas trip, the university said.

     

    Health Minister Adrian Dix said 13 of B.C.'s 21 cases have some travel links to Iran.

     

    Henry said of B.C.'s 21 cases only one person is in hospital, a woman in her 80s who remained in critical condition on Thursday in the intensive care unit at Vancouver General Hospital.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report
    Subway sued both the CBC and Trent University, which runs the lab, for defamation over a February 2017 broadcast of "Marketplace" and the accompanying online publications about the chain's Canadian chicken products.

    Ontario Court Dismisses Subway's Lawsuit Against CBC Over Chicken Report

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 6, Seize 30 KG Of Cocaine And $125K Cash In 3 Separate Busts

    The Surrey RCMP Gang Enforcement Team (SGET) has had a successful November, with three significant seizures of suspected cocaine and cash since November 8, 2019.

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 6, Seize 30 KG Of Cocaine And $125K Cash In 3 Separate Busts

    War Of Words Escalates Between Legault And Pallister Over Manitoba's Quebec Ads

    Brian Pallister's government recently announced it is rolling out a series of newspaper and electronic advertisements in Quebec that welcome government workers to move to Manitoba if they feel threatened by their province's ban on religious symbols in the workplace.

    War Of Words Escalates Between Legault And Pallister Over Manitoba's Quebec Ads

    'Linda O'Leary Was Not Impaired' During Fatal Boat Crash, Says Defence Lawyer

    A lawyer for Linda O'Leary, the wife of celebrity businessman Kevin O'Leary, says his client was not impaired when she got involved in a boat crash on an Ontario lake that left two people dead.    

    'Linda O'Leary Was Not Impaired' During Fatal Boat Crash, Says Defence Lawyer

    Computer Issues May Delay Murder Trial For Alek Minassian In Toronto Van Attack

    Computer Issues May Delay Murder Trial For Alek Minassian In Toronto Van Attack
    TORONTO - The heavily encrypted digital devices owned by the man who carried out the deadly Toronto van attack are giving his own lawyer problems, court heard Thursday, which may delay the start of Alek Minassian's first-degree murder trial.    

    Computer Issues May Delay Murder Trial For Alek Minassian In Toronto Van Attack

    Cities Ask For Gas-Tax Fund Boost In 100-day Wish List For Trudeau Government

    Canada's cities say the federal Liberals are willing to find creative ways to remove political roadblocks from provinces to fund billions in municipal projects, a sign of hope that comes as they ask Ottawa for more money and new ways to fund local work.

    Cities Ask For Gas-Tax Fund Boost In 100-day Wish List For Trudeau Government