B.C. reports 7 more people in hospital with COVID-19, 7 more in the ICU and 3 additional deaths
Province records 3,223 new cases of the disease
B.C. health officials say 324 people are now in hospital with COVID-19, including 90 in intensive care, as the province reported three more deaths from the disease and 3,223 new cases on Thursday.
The new numbers represent an increase of seven COVID-19 patients hospitalized within the last 24 hours, and seven more patients in the ICU.
Experts say hospitalizations are a more accurate barometer of the disease's impact, as new case numbers in B.C. are likely higher than reported, now that the province has hit its testing limit because of the Omicron surge.
As of Thursday, 24.2 per cent of COVID-19 tests in B.C. are coming back positive, according to the province's COVID-19 dashboard.
Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry has said that anything above a five per cent test-positivity rate indicates a concerning level of community transmission.
There are currently 31,817 recorded active cases of people infected with the novel coronavirus in B.C.
Overall hospitalizations, which typically lag behind spikes and dips in new cases, are up by 53.6 per cent from last Thursday, when 211 people were in hospital with the disease and up about 34.4 per cent from a month ago when 241 people were in hospital.
The number of patients in intensive care is up by about 36.4 per cent from 66 a week ago and up by 1.1 per cent from a month ago when 89 people were in the ICU.
The provincial death toll from COVID-19 is now 2,430 lives lost out of 273,731 confirmed cases to date.
Sixteen new outbreaks were declared in assisted living, long-term care and acute care facilities on Thursday. There are a total of 37 active outbreaks in those settings, including outbreaks at Mission Memorial Hospital, Surrey Memorial Hospital, Eagle Ridge Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital and Victoria General Hospital.
As of Thursday, 88.4 per cent of those five and older in B.C. have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 83.1 per cent a second dose.
From Dec. 29 to Jan. 4, people who were not fully vaccinated accounted for 16.5 per cent of cases and from Dec. 22 to Jan. 4, and they accounted for 41.1 per cent of hospitalizations, according to the province.
70 percent of people in critical care due to COVID-19 are not fully vaccinated.<br>See the breakdown below: <a href="https://t.co/P4WUrFy6FO">pic.twitter.com/P4WUrFy6FO</a>
—@adriandix
Nearly half of Prince Rupert's firefighters in isolation
On Wednesday, the Prince Rupert Fire Rescue Department was operating with only seven of 20 staff, due to COVID-19.
Prince Rupert city manager Rob Buchan said the skeleton crew of seven firefighters had already responded to a house fire and a medical distress call.
On Thursday five firefighters who ended their isolation or tested negative returned, bringing the number of staff up to 12.
Volunteer firefighters from neighbouring Port Edward are on standby, and firefighters with COVID-19 could be asked to return to work in a critical situation, Buchan said.
City of Surrey police shortage
As of Thursday the City of Surrey has 42 police officers and 12 municipal employees who are off from testing positive for COVID-19 or awaiting results.
"Our ability at this time to provide police services hasn't been compromised because of the spread of Omicron, even though we are impacted in our detachment," said Surrey RCMP spokesperson Elenore Sturko.
Sturko said the detachment has planned since the beginning of the pandemic for such a scenario and has been able to move officers around as needed to fill essential positions.
"We've hit waves before and we feel very confident that we're going to get through it as a community together."
Fiftteen staff have already returned to duty after recovering from COVID-19 and eight more are slated to return shortly. she said.
Schools prepare for staffing shortages
Schools in B.C. are preparing for the possibility of having to deal with staffing shortages.
Each school district would develop its own contingency plans. In such a scenario, Surrey schools would initiate a "functional closure," where schools would move to remote learning until staffing levels increase.
District superintendent Jordan Tinney said the closure would take a three-day-long phased approach.
Parents would be notified on Day 1, teachers and staff would have the following day to prepare, and online learning would begin on Day 3.