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More than half of B.C.'s 681 seniors' homes lack plans to allow visitors

Data as of July 15 is that 318 of 681 homes have submitted plans to government
adriandixjuly16
B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix speaks to media | B.C. government

Less than half of B.C.'s 681 seniors' homes have yet to submit plans to the government on how they intend to start allowing family members and others to visit residents. 

Health Minister Adrian Dix said July 16 that representatives at 318 homes have submitted plans to government, and that this is up significantly from the 61 homes that had such plans a week ago. Dix did not say whether government had rejected any of the submitted plans, and the government did not call on Glacier Media at a July 16 press conference so he was not asked. 

Dix said last month that he was earmarking $165 million in new funding for up to three new full-time staff per home to oversee the visits and train visitors on how to wear protective equipment. He did not say how recruitment was going, how many people have been hired or how much money has been distributed.

Dix also announced in June that the government would provide a total of $26.5 million to care home operators to subsidize them for extra costs endured during the pandemic, including such items as hand sanitizer and masks. 

Provincial health officer Bonnie Henry said July 16 that there were 21 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, including three cases that they call "epi-linked," or presumed cases that have not been proven through testing but are being treated as official cases.

The province has now recorded 3,170 cases since the novel coronavirus first appeared in B.C. in late January. 

Almost 88% of those infected, or 2,789 people, have recovered. Of those who haven't, 189 people have died and 192 people are actively fighting the virus. Only 15 people are hospitalized, with three of those in intensive care units. The rest are self-isolating at home. There were no new deaths recorded in the past 24 hours. 

Two seniors' long-term care facilities have active outbreaks: Holy Family Hospital long-term care facility and Maple Hill long-term care facility. There also remains an outbreak at Mission Memorial Hospital, which spawned the outbreak at Maple Hill, when infected patients were transferred from the hospital. 

There have been 655 infections in seniors' homes, including 400 residents and 255 staff.

The breakdown of all COVID-19 infections by health region is:
•  1,028 in Vancouver Coastal Health;
•  1,667 in Fraser Health;
•  136 in Island Health;
•  223 in Interior Health;
•  65 in Northern Health; and
•  51 people who reside outside Canada.

Of the existing outbreaks, 27 cases have been linked to a gathering in Kelowna that spawned cases in multiple locations. There are also four cases related to the Krazy Cherry Fruit Co. in Oliver. It is safe to eat cherries from that facility, Henry said.

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@GlenKorstrom