COVID numbers continue to tick upwards as B.C. records 267 new cases over 3 days - Action News
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British Columbia

COVID numbers continue to tick upwards as B.C. records 267 new cases over 3 days

B.C. health officials have announced 267new cases of COVID-19 and onemore death over the last three days.

There are 43 people in hospital with the disease, 17 of whom are in intensive care

Members of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra perform for people at the COVID-19 vaccination clinic at the Vancouver Convention Centre on June 24. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

B.C. health officials have announced 267new cases of COVID-19 and onemore death over the last three days.

That's an average of 89 new cases a day over the weekend, withthe seven-day rolling averageincreasing154 per cent in three weeks.

In a written statement, the provincial governmentsaid there are currently 695active cases of people infected with the novel coronavirus in B.C., up by 100 over the last three days.

A total of 43 people are in hospital with the disease, the lowest hospitalization numbers since Sept. 10. Seventeen people are in intensive care, up from 12 a week ago.

Overall hospitalizations, which typically lag behind spikes and dips in new cases, are down by 12per cent from last Monday, when 49people were in hospital with the disease.

The provincialdeath toll from COVID-19is now 1,768lives lost out of 149,109confirmed cases to date.

So far, 6,584,264doses of vaccine have been administered, including 2,783,587second doses.

Uptick in cases

As COVID-19 cases slowly increase in B.C., health officials and modelling experts say the majority of those cases are among unvaccinated people, and that the increase was predicted as the province looseningrestrictions on movement and social gatherings.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said Friday that 78 per cent of new cases recorded between June 15 and July 15were among unvaccinated people.

CBC News has spoken to some unvaccinated Canadians to learn more about the hesitancythat has taken hold in some pockets of the country.

Many of the holdouts say they're concerned about safety and side-effects. Others say they're not happy with the current products on offer.

There are also practical considerations.

A number of the unvaccinated have a needle-related phobiathat can make getting a shot afrightening experience. Some have severe allergies to the vaccine components. Some rural Canadians have had trouble with access.

Among the biggest unknowns for the future of the pandemic remains thehighly transmissible delta variantnow circulating in Canada though arecent study has shown that two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech or AstraZeneca-Oxford's COVID-19 vaccines are nearly as effective against the delta coronavirus variant as they are against the previously dominant alpha variant.

Mink farm outbreak

According to the Ministry of Agriculture, two minkhave tested positive for COVID-19on a farm under quarantine after it had a mink test positive in May of 2021.

Five moremink at the same farm have initially tested positive. Finaltesting results are still pending.

As a result, the ministry saysit'sissuing a provincial health orderto all mink farm operators in the province, that placesa moratorium on any new mink farms in B.C. and capsexisting mink farms at their current numbers.

Three B.C. mink farms have had mink test positive for the virussince December 2020 and all three remain under quarantine

British Columbians aged 12 and over who have not yet been immunized can register in three ways:

With files from Bridgette Watson, Michelle Ghoussoub and John Paul Tasker