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B.C. sets record for most active COVID-19 infections: 775

Province recorded 83 new COVID-19 cases on August 18 for a total of 4,677 since January
Adrian Dix
B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix has been giving regular updates on the extent of COVID-19 in B.C. since January


The number of people actively fighting COVID-19 infections in B.C. hit an all-time high for the second day in a row on August 18, thanks to the B.C. government announcing that 775 people are battling the disease that spawned the ongoing global pandemic.

Before yesterday, when 743 people were actively fighting infections, the highest number of people with active infections in the province had been 717, on April 28. 

The rise in people fighting the disease comes thanks to a disproportionate number of people newly getting infected.

Health Minister Adrian Dix and deputy provincial health officer Reka Gustafson said 83 people have been infected with COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, while 51 people officially recovered from the disease during that same 24-hour period.

A total of 3,704 people have recovered from COVID-19 in B.C. Since January 28, when the first case of COVID-19 was discovered in the province, there have been a total of 4,677 cases. 

The breakdown of the infections by health region is:
• 1,447 in Vancouver Coastal Health;
• 2,473 in Fraser Health;
• 156 in Island Health;
• 407 in Interior Health;
• 120 in Northern Health; and
• 74 people who reside outside Canada.

The good news is that hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions remain comparatively low. 

The province now has six people in hospital with COVID-19 (up two from yesterday) while three people are in intensive care units, which is the same number as yesterday. The other patients – the vast majority – are self isolating at home. 

B.C.'s intensive care units have recently been comparatively empty in recent weeks, compared with April 6, when a record 72 people were receiving special care in those units. The first British Columbian with COVID-19 who needed the ICU entered that ward on March 4, more than five weeks after the first case was identified in the province. That lag time, and the comparative bump in new daily cases in August may set the stage for an increase in the number of ICU patients in future weeks. 

No new people have died from the virus in the past 24 hours, so that leaves the death toll so far in B.C. at 198.

While a higher percentage of coronavirus-infected people die in B.C. than in some other jurisdictions, or more than 4.2%, the province has done well to limit new deaths in recent weeks. The province took 88 days after recording its first COVID-19 case to register its 100th virus-related death. It has since gone 115 days and has yet to reach the 200-death threshold. 

In the U.S., which has the world's highest number of infections, 171,516 people have died out of 5,474,630 people who have caught the virus, for a death rate of 3.1%, according to Johns Hopkins University. In Brazil, the globe's second highest source for infections, 108,536 people have died out of 3,359,570 people infected, for a 3.2% death rate, also according to Johns Hopkins University data. 

There is one health facility that has an outbreak: New Westminster's Queen's Park Care Centre. 

Nine seniors' care homes or assisted-living facilities have active outbreaks:
•Holy Family Hospital in Vancouver;
•Arbutus Care Centre in Vancouver;
•Richmond Lions Manor in Richmond;
•Czorny Alzheimer Centre in Surrey;
•Dania Home in Burnaby;
•Derby Manor in Burnaby;
•George Derby Centre in Burnaby;
•New Vista Care Home in Burnaby; and
•Maple Ridge Seniors Village in Maple Ridge;

Aside from releasing new data, the B.C. government today also formally extended the provincial state of emergency. That allows Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General Mike Farnworth to continue to use extraordinary powers under the province's Emergency Program Act to support its pandemic response

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