Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Seniors in B.C. care face high COVID-19 death risk

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2021 03:13 PM
  • Seniors in B.C. care face high COVID-19 death risk

VICTORIA - British Columbia's seniors advocate says long-term care and assisted living residents are three and a half times more likely to contract COVID-19 and 33 times more likely to die of the disease.

Isobel Mackenzie's figures come from a report released today that recommends expanding paid sick-leave provisions for staff, hiring more registered nurses, eliminating shared rooms and increasing the scope and frequency of COVID-19 testing.

Two of her key recommendations — mandatory vaccines for all staff and booster shots for residents — are in progress.

Mackenzie's report covered the pandemic period from March 2020 to February 2021, recording 4,484 COVID-19 cases at care facilities and 782 deaths.

Recent data posted by the province's Centre for Disease Control says there were 368 COVID-19 outbreaks at B.C. care facilities from January 2020 to September 2021 and 1,092 deaths of residents.

Mackenzie says while everybody has been affected by the ongoing pandemic, seniors, particularly those living in care facilities, have felt the deepest impact since they are disproportionately at risk of serious illness from COVID-19 or death.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Province giving all workers up to 3 paid days of sick leave

Province giving all workers up to 3 paid days of sick leave
Employers will be required to pay workers their full wages and those without an existing sick-leave program will be reimbursed by the government $200 per day for each worker.

Province giving all workers up to 3 paid days of sick leave

Feds invest $12B in Ontario transit

Feds invest $12B in Ontario transit
He says the money will go toward four subway projects in the Greater Toronto Area and one rapid-transit project in Hamilton.

Feds invest $12B in Ontario transit

Ottawa unlocks $740M in airport relief

Ottawa unlocks $740M in airport relief
About $490 million million of that windfall is bound for large airports to put toward critical infrastructure such as runway repairs and transit stations.

Ottawa unlocks $740M in airport relief

Alberta stops AstraZeneca first doses

Alberta stops AstraZeneca first doses
Alberta appears to be the first province to officially take AstraZeneca out of the offerings for first doses but it likely won't be the last.

Alberta stops AstraZeneca first doses

Vaccine confidence in Canada holds steady: poll

Vaccine confidence in Canada holds steady: poll
It also suggests Canadians are largely open to the idea of vaccine passports but support them more for travel than for everyday activities like dining out or going to a concert or shopping mall.

Vaccine confidence in Canada holds steady: poll

Health providers urge feds to fund pharmacare

Health providers urge feds to fund pharmacare
Dr. Melanie Bechard, a pediatric emergency room physician and chair of Doctors for Medicare, says she was disappointed at the lack of new funding for pharmacare in the budget. 

Health providers urge feds to fund pharmacare