British Columbia

B.C. hires hundreds more COVID-19 contact tracers as health officials continue to dismiss federal app

B.C. is hiring hundreds of new contact tracers as the province reports an unprecedented surge in new virus transmissions, but officials say the COVID Alert app being used by most provinces won't help in its current form.

B.C. not joining majority of provinces using COVID Alert app

The COVID Alert app is designed to notify users if they have been in proximity to another app user who has tested positive for COVID-19. Every province in Canada has begun using the app except for B.C. and Alberta. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Health officials in British Columbia say hundreds of new contact tracers are being hired to help manage the workload as the number of new COVID-19 cases surge to staggering new heights in British Columbia — but they're continuing to downplay the usefulness of the federal COVID Alert app.

On Monday, Dr. Réka Gustafson, deputy provincial health officer, announced 1,120 new cases in B.C. since the previous update on Friday. Each of the three days accounted for more daily cases than ever before, in a province where the previous record — set a week earlier — had been 317 new daily cases.

Gustafson reported 2,945 active cases, and 6,448 people under active public health monitoring.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said on Monday that the province is hiring hundreds of new contact tracers, in addition to the 500 to 600 people who have been doing the work since the pandemic began — sometimes while doing other work as well.

"This work has been particularly important in recent weeks, when you have more than 6,000 people who are being monitored by public health," said Dix.

He said the hiring process began in the summer in anticipation of the respiratory illness season, and by the end of this week, 600 new tracers will have been hired, with the goal of hiring 800.

But both Dix and Gustafson dismissed the idea that the federal COVID Alert app, which has been adopted by eight other provinces, could help with the contact tracing load. 

"Based on the features of that app, mostly because of the type of information that's provided individuals, it wasn't felt that it would have additional benefit, would be additional value to the existing contact tracing," said Gustafson. "We reviewed that app very, very carefully."

Deputy provincial health officer Dr. Réka Gustafson dismissed the idea that the federal COVID Alert app, which has been adopted by eight other provinces, could help with the contact tracing load. (CBC)

She said B.C. health officials are working with federal partners, but until a series of new features are added to the app, it wouldn't be considered in B.C.

On Friday, the app was updated to allow users to input the date they were tested, as well as when symptoms began.

So far, 4.9 million Canadians have downloaded the app, with 2,939 people using it to report a positive COVID-19 test. Health Canada has urged all provinces and territories to activate the app, and suggests people download it even in provinces where it isn't used. Alberta and B.C. are the final two provinces that have yet to activate the app. 

But on Monday Gustafson criticized the app, sharing a list of shortcomings with reporters.

"It isn't able to notify and tell them when, how long, what they need to do, how intense that contact was, how close that contact was, when it occurred and what they need to do about it," she said.

Gustafson said B.C.'s contact tracers are able to provide people who have been in contact with the virus with specific information they need to "make a meaningful change in their behaviour that reduces the risk to the people they love and to their communities."

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