Now that B.C. is closer to being back in the driver's seat, following things are important:
- Will future variants be less efficient against the vaccine?
- What is the efficiency of vaccines more than a month after one shot?
- Can people follow guidelines for 1-2 more months?
If we get positive answers to those questions, we don't need a lot of modelling — we can see the numbers in Israel and the United Kingdom on where things are headed.
But there's still work and uncertainty ahead.
Keep making smart decisions.
No, you're wrong.
(As are many who centre their analysis on testing, rather than rolling averages, hospitalizations, and deaths.)
There were five days total last month where we tested between 12-13K a day.
It's very reasonable to criticize B.C.'s reluctance to utilize rapid testing more, given other countries with non-COVID Zero frameworks that had lots of success with them.
But B.C.'s testing framework has been fairly consistent for months.
It doesn't tell you much day to day.
Bluntly, there are some people who trust very little information that comes from the province, except for the testing numbers, which indicates to them that all the other numbers are questionable.
Ultimately it's hard to have a debate if one side doesn't trust the data.
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when you put in your census code and it's the long form
so far there is no section of the long form census asking how many parks you ranked in the last year BUT I HAVE FAITH
prior to completing a long form census i had no idea how important it was to continually affirm that i do not live on a farm or do any farming-related activities
Frustratingly, the BCCDC has had another "systems issue" today, which is code for "you're not getting much data".
So limited extra numbers today.
We had around 164 hospitalizations the last three days — down from the 60-70 peak, but still way too high.
88% of all #COVID19 hospitalizations in B.C. now are in the Lower Mainland.
In the rest of B.C., it's less than 10 a day, and going down.
For the first time since cases began declining in the 3rd wave, we saw a decent drop in active cases in Fraser Health.
We've talked about one (or even three days) worth of data not being enough to draw conclusions many times during this, but let's hope that dip continues.
An average of 725 cases of #COVID19 announced in B.C. over the last three days, a 13% drop from the previous Monday, as the province's 3rd wave trendline continues to drop.
Encouragingly, hospitalizations down to 474, lowest since April 20.
15 new deaths.
Today's chart.
An average of 30,203 people given a vaccine shot in B.C. over the last three days, slightly down from the previous two weekends.
As we've talked about, doubling of weekly Pfizer supply kicks in NOW, and we see whether the province can do one final ramp up of distribution.
i missed the point in the metaphor where we went from the marathon to the bridge of the uss enterprise, but star trek time travel episodes always had one or two logic gaps