â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

Northern Health vaccination rates lowest in BC ; COVID-19 cases nearly double in PG

The fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic hit Northern BC hard this week.

The Prince George Local Health area (LHA), which also encompasses McBride, Valemount, and Mackenzie saw 247 cases between September 5 – 11, according to the BCCDC.

Compared to the rest of the province, the PG LHA saw the third-highest amount of cases during this time frame, following only the Central Okanogan LHA which had 360, and the Kamloops LHA, which saw 270.

Between September 5 to 11th, the Prince George LHA saw nearly double the number of cases identified from the week before, as 142 new cases were identified between August 29 to September 4.

70% of residents 12 and up in the PG area are fully vaccinated, a mark that is relatively low compared to the rest of the province, but quite high compared to the rest of the Northern Health region.

In Northern Health, Prince George has the fifth-highest rate of fully vaccinated residents 12+, following Prince Rupert (73%), Nisga’a (74%), Haida Gwaii (78%), and Kitimat (80%).

Currently, 71% of residents 18+ are fully vaccinated and 81% have received the first dose in the Prince George LHA, meanwhile, 80% of residents 12+ have received the first dose of a vaccine in the PG LHA.

The majority of LHA’s in Fraser Health, Vancouver Island Health, and Vancouver Coastal Health have at least 70% of their 12+ population fully vaccinated, however, LHA’s in the Interior and North continue to fall behind this mark.

Cases continue to rise in the Peace River North and South Local Health areas, which have notoriously low vaccine uptake as the regions saw 75 and 67 cases between September 5-11, respectively.

Only 50% of residents 12+ in the Peace River North area are fully vaccinated, a mark that drops to 49% in the Peace River South area.

The Peace River North, South, and Fort Nelson areas have by far the lowest vaccine uptake in the entire province, along with the Nechako area, which has only 58% of residents 12+ fully vaccinated.

72 new cases were identified in the Nechako area, as 67% of eligible residents (12+) are fully vaccinated.

Nechako has the fourth-lowest rate of fully vaccinated residents 12+ in all of Northern Health, followed by Peace River North, Peace River South, and Fort Nelson.

Cases also jumped in Quesnel, an area with 62% of residents 12+ fully vaccinated,  as the area saw 51 cases this past week, up from the 33 identified the week prior.

Across Northern Health there are 849 active cases while 46 people are in hospital, 12 of whom are in ICU.

Something going on in the Prince George area you think people should know about?
Send us a news tip by emailing [email protected].

Continue Reading

cjci Now playing play

cirx Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Hartley’s Sports Shorts; Wednesday, July 16th

95th Major League Baseball All-Star Game----(in Atlanta)

June home sales were hot across the BC Northern Real Estate Board

Northern BC home sales were ahead of their 10-year average in June after 476 unit sales were made according to the BC Real Estate Association. That's a year-over-year spike of 11.7% when compared to the same time last year.

Kids Carnival returning to Huble Homestead this weekend

Huble Homestead is inviting families to its Kids Carnival taking place on Sunday.

More members, but not more meetings for Heritage Commission, City Council decides

Prince George City Council voted on a number of recommendations from the City's Heritage Commission at last night's (Monday) meeting.  During a regular council meeting in March, Prince George Heritage Commission Chair Dr. George Davison outlined many of the issues the Commission has been facing, such as a reduced number of meetings, and a reduction in City staff support. 

B.C’s youth watchdog says more work needs to be done, one year after report on systemic failures

One year after a report by British Columbia's Child and Youth Representative on the horrific death of an Indigenous boy in care, the province is still working on an action plan for systemic changes to children and youth social services.
- Advertisement -