COVID-19 hospitalizations rise for first time this year while ICU numbers drop 40 per cent
Province says there were 193 people in hospital Thursday and 15 in critical care
The number of people in hospital with COVID-19 across British Columbia increased slightly following several weeks of decline, while the number of patients in critical care fell 40 per cent.
According to the latest weekly report from the B.C. Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC), as of Thursday, 193 people are in hospital with the virus, five more than the week before.
It's the first time this year the province has recorded a rise in hospitalizations. The year started with 356 people in hospital with COVID-19 as of Jan. 5.
Fifteen people are in critical care, compared to 25 the week prior.
As of Feb. 11, the province says there have been 13 new deaths among people who tested positive for COVID-19 within the last month, bringing the total number of deaths in B.C. linked to the virus since the start of the pandemic to 5,157.
B.C. labs reported 341 cases of the virus for a total of 395,709 cases since the beginning of the pandemic.
Unlike hospitalizations, case totals significantly underestimate the true spread of the disease as the BCCDC only counts PCR tests in its report, which are currently inaccessible to the majority of British Columbians.
Weekly numbers shared by the province are also preliminary and are often changed retroactively.
Wastewater data had not been released as of Thursday afternoon.
Data gaps during vaccine rollout pose risks: B.C.'s auditor general
The numbers come the same day B.C.'s auditor general said the Ministry of Health should have access to a registry of residents and staff in long-term care facilities as well as heath-care workers after concluding it sometimes "struggled'' to collect reliable COVID-19 vaccination information for high-risk groups.
In his latest report on the province's COVID-19 vaccine coverage, auditor general Michael Pickup says the ministry had processes to estimate vaccination rates for residents and staff in long-term care and assisted living, but the process was cumbersome.
He says that means there was a risk to the quality of data collected and the vaccination rates for those priority groups could have been inaccurate.
Pickup says the province was able to estimate the number of health-care workers who were vaccinated in the early stages of the rollout when vaccines were focused on those most likely to be exposed to patients with COVID-19 or to spread the virus to patients.
As more workers qualified for vaccines, the ministry continued to track the number who were vaccinated, but it did not revise its population estimate to account for newly eligible staff, meaning the coverage rate was "overstated and was not useful'' from February to October 2021.
In October 2021, an order was issued requiring vaccination for all health-care workers working in health authorities, and the ministry was able to use health authority databases of staff to help implement the order.
Pickup says his office was told ministry and health services authority staff did not have the authority to access those databases until the introduction of the COVID-19 vaccination mandate.
"Once they had access to these databases, the ministry had adequate processes to monitor vaccination rates and regularly provided this information to decision makers,'' the report says.
The COVID-19 vaccination program was the largest vaccination campaign in B.C. history, with nearly 14 million doses administered between December 2020 and December 2022.
With files from The Canadian Press