Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Henry says COVID-19 is here for long haul

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2020 09:19 PM
  • Henry says COVID-19 is here for long haul

British Columbia's top doctor says the resurgence the province is seeing in COVID-19 cases could be a second wave, but she believes the illness can be suppressed heading into the fall.

Speaking at an ElectionsBC news conference, Bonnie Henry says calling it a second wave is semantics and the reality is the pandemic will be with us for a long time.

Henry says the key will be finding the right balance as cases surge while allowing people to carry out activities like going to work and school or holding elections.

B.C. announced 366 new cases over a three-day period on Monday and four new deaths, numbers similar to the first wave, which Henry says the province managed to suppress.

She says health officials believe the rate of infection will be kept "low and slow" into the fall.

Henry was reacting to Quebec's announcement Monday that the province was experiencing a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

MORE National ARTICLES

WE Charity shuttering Canadian operations

WE Charity shuttering Canadian operations
Craig and Marc Kielburger, who are also planning to step down from the organization they co-founded, were set to release an open letter explaining the move.

WE Charity shuttering Canadian operations

B.C. boosts flu shots in fall pandemic plan

B.C. boosts flu shots in fall pandemic plan
They said some of the preparations include being able to conduct up to 20,000 daily COVID-19 tests, hiring more than 600 additional contact tracers and purchasing more than 1.9 million doses of flu vaccine.

B.C. boosts flu shots in fall pandemic plan

Take a new look at Tories, O'Toole asks

Take a new look at Tories, O'Toole asks
In recent weeks, statues of Canada's first prime minister have been toppled or defaced in protests against systemic racism and Canada's colonial history.

Take a new look at Tories, O'Toole asks

Some B.C. students wary as classes draw near

Some B.C. students wary as classes draw near
Education Minister Rob Fleming has said districts are expecting 85 to 90 per cent of students to attend school in person, but some parents and students say they're frustrated by the lack of remote learning options, large class sizes and inconsistent messaging about physical distancing.

Some B.C. students wary as classes draw near

B.C. First Nation declares COVID-19 emergency

B.C. First Nation declares COVID-19 emergency
A notice on the Tla'amin Nation website says residents have been ordered to shelter in place to slow the spread of the virus while health officials complete contact tracing.

B.C. First Nation declares COVID-19 emergency

Nightclubs closed in B.C. after COVID spike

Nightclubs closed in B.C. after COVID spike
Henry says her revised health orders also include a 10 p.m. cut-off for alcohol sales at bars and restaurants, and they must close by 11 p.m. unless they are serving food.

Nightclubs closed in B.C. after COVID spike