Interior Health has reported the highest single-day COVID-19 case count since the pandemic began as numbers continue to spike in a few hotspots across the B.C. Interior.
On Wednesday, Aug. 4, Interior Health posted 171 cases, breaking a one-day record set the day before, which tallied 146 cases.
Even as the province鈥檚 vaccination efforts continue apace, a few places in the Okanagan and the Kootenays have seen a resurgence of increased cases.
Between July 25-31, the Central Okanagan Local Health Area (LHA) reported 450 cases according to data released Wednesday by the BC Centre for Disease Control. In the previous reporting week, the same LHA posted 153 cases.
The spike in recent case counts in the 琉璃神社 area was enough to declare a COVID-19 outbreak, which forced a return to pandemic protocols such as reinstating a mask mandate.
Health minister Adrian Dix urged residents in the Interior to get their COVID-19 vaccine doses, but admitted that while the province has made every effort to make the vaccine available, there are some who are still hesitant or will outright refuse it.
鈥淭here鈥檚 some vaccine hesitancy,鈥 said Dix, in an interview with Black Press Media. 鈥淚 know there are some people who are opposed to the vaccine out there, and I don鈥檛 think 鈥 especially those who express that publicly 鈥 I don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e necessarily going to convince them, but we need to get everybody else鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 take the approach of criticizing people whether they鈥檙e vaccinated, I鈥檓 taking the approach of giving them more opportunity to get vaccinated and making the powerful case 鈥 and there鈥檚 a powerful case 鈥 for people to get vaccinated.鈥
In much of the B.C. Interior, there is a lag in first and second vaccination dose rates between younger and older population segments, contrasted to the 18-49 age range, based on BC CDC data as of Aug. 3.
For example, in Central Okanagan, people 12-plus and 18-plus have a first-dose vaccination rate of over 75 per cent, but the 18-49 age range is at 69 per cent.
The gap widens for second doses; 12-plus and 18-plus hover just over 64 per cent, while the 18-49 age range is just over 51 per cent.
For people over 50 years of age, vaccine rates for first and second doses are high.
But Central Okanagan isn鈥檛 the only COVID-19 hotspot that鈥檚 cropped up in the B.C. Interior recent weeks.
Over in the West Kootenay, Nelson LHA saw a spike in cases; 38 cases were reported between July 25-31, as opposed to 13 cases the week prior. The Castlegar LHA is also experiencing a sharp increase in cases over the last two weeks.
Outbreaks were declared in two long-term care facilities in Nelson and Cranbrook. At Nelson Jubilee Manor and Kootenay Street Village, both facilities had two staff members and one resident test positive, according to Interior Health.
trevor.crawley@cranbrooktownsman.com
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