British Columbia

B.C. expects to receive 792,000 doses of vaccine by March

B.C. is reporting 2,211 new cases of COVID-19, and 45 new deaths in the province over a four-day period.

Health officials also announce 2,211 new cases of COVID-19 and 45 more deaths

A total of 24,139 people in B.C. have received their first shot of the COVID-19 vaccination as of Jan 3. The province aims to provide vaccines to 3,300 people a day over the next two weeks. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

B.C. is expecting to receive 792,000 doses of vaccine and provide at least one dose to 550,000 people by March.

Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix updated B.C.'s plan to immunize its population against COVID-19 in a briefing on Monday.

A total of 24,139 people in B.C. have received their first shot of the COVID-19 vaccination as of Jan. 3, and the province aims to provide vaccines to 3,300 people a day for the next two weeks. The second dose of the vaccine will be administered 35 days after the first, in order to maximize the number of people with some level of protection against the virus.

"It's a monumental task," said Henry.

"There are many months left to go on this. We are constrained by logistics and also how much vaccine we are receiving. But we are optimistic."

The next few weeks will see the province vaccinate priority populations, which include staff and residents of long-term care, residents and staff of assisted living residences, people waiting for placement in long-term care, essential visitors in long-term care and assisted living, hospital health-care workers, paramedics, public health workers and people living in remote and isolated First Nations community.

Other priority groups include seniors who don't live in group facilities, people experiencing homelessness, people living in provincial correctional facilities and mental health residential care, hospital staff and general practitioners.

Following those groups, and contingent on supply, B.C. will begin a mass vaccination strategy to immunize the general population, descending in five-year cohorts, after those over 80 have been immunized.

Henry said supply of the Pfizer-BionNTech and Moderna vaccines are expected to increase substantially in March, at which point B.C. will work to significantly ramp up its immunization program.

"Our next challenge is going to be getting as much of our vaccine as we receive out to as many people are possible — at least by April we should have way more vaccines than we can distribute in much more traditional ways to people," she said. 

As of Jan. 4, B.C. had received 54,625 doses of vaccine.

Watch | Dr. Bonnie Henry says B.C. can reposition contact tracers to do immunization work 

B.C. hoping to scale up vaccination schedule

4 years ago
Duration 0:52
If COVID-19 cases can be controlled, Dr. Bonnie Henry says B.C. can reposition contact tracers to do immunization work.

Dix said the province is on track to hit its goal of 550,000 immunizations by the end of March.

"We're just starting. We only received 3,900 doses initially, and we're just entering the third week of immunization. We're building up every week. It's an extraordinarily difficult task," he said.

The province will provide more information on its plan to immunize the general population later in January. But Henry said that B.C. "absolutely" has enough health-care staff capacity to ramp up its response once additional doses become available.

"We're looking to our colleagues in primary care, the pharmacists who work with us, immunizers around the province. We talked about some of the nurses and others that work as contact tracers. If we can control our pandemic, then we can reposition people to work on the immunization programs as well," she said.

2,211 new cases over four days

Health officials also announced 2,211 new cases of COVID-19, and 45 more deaths in the province over the last four days.

There were 565 new cases between Thursday and Friday, 607 new cases between Friday and Saturday, 500 cases between Saturday and Sunday, and 539 new cases between Sunday and Monday. Active cases are at 6,823, the lowest number since Nov. 17.

A total of 351 people are currently hospitalized with the disease, 76 of whom are in intensive care, while the number of active cases is now at 6,823, the lowest number since Nov. 17. 

Hospitalizations per capita are lower in B.C. than any other province from Alberta to Quebec and below those in 48 U.S. states, according to an analysis by CBC reporter Justin McElroy. 

Henry also confirmed that two First Nation elders have died of the virus.

Monday's update was the first since Thursday, when 683 new cases and eight more deaths were announced. 

Monday morning also marked a return to school for children across B.C. For students at a Surrey high school, the return to school ended two weeks of isolation after nearly 50 cases of COVID-19 were linked to five classes at Earl Marriott Secondary just before the winter break.

More than 40,000 people have signed a petition calling on the province to pause in-class learning for two weeks — something several other provinces have done in a bid to lower infection rates after the holidays.

Positive cases include teachers and a number of them stem from common use of the gym during physical education classes.

B.C. recorded six new outbreaks in health-care facilities over the four day reporting period. There are now 52 active outbreaks in long-term care facilities and eight in acute care units of hospitals.

Henry faced questions around the long-term care home outbreak at Little Mountain Place, where 38 people have died. 

She said B.C. has no plans to call in the military or other external supports to support the most hard-hit facilities, because the province has trained a pool of staff that can provide support in homes where employees have contracted COVID-19. But she said it remains unclear why the virus seems to spread so much faster in some facilities than others. 

"We try very much to make sure that the staffing is maintained, that the personal protective equipment is there, that the cleaning processes are in place. We have infection control teams that work with the homes, and sometimes it's just an incredible challenge. I wish that we knew the answers to how it was being transmitted in some cases," she said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Michelle Ghoussoub

Reporter, CBC News

Michelle Ghoussoub is a reporter and anchor for CBC News based in Vancouver. She has received two nominations for the Canadian Screen Award for Best Local Reporter. She can be reached at [email protected].