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Burnaby shatters weekly COVID-19 case record by more than 100

Burnaby soars into unknown territory
00 covid-19 weekly burnaby april
This map shows Metro Vancouver cases by city.

Burnaby has obliterated its weekly record for COVID-19 cases.

New COVID-19 cases in Burnaby skyrocketed during the last reporting period, with 475 between April 4 and 10 – setting a new all-time record.

That’s far more than the 366 new cases reported from March 28 to April 3 – which was a new record for Burnaby.

Burnaby has seen cases remain above 200 for eight consecutive weeks.

Burnaby saw 244 new infections between March 21 and 27 – more than the 210 new infections between March 14 and 20, but down slightly from the 246 new coronavirus cases from March 7 to 13. There were 203 new cases from Feb. 28 to March 6, 270 new cases from Feb. 21 to 27 and 243 cases from Feb. 14 to 20.

The previous weekly record for Burnaby was 341 cases from Dec. 6-12, 2020.

B.C.'s large third wave of COVID-19 cases contains a serious undertow, which is a surge in hospitalizations. 

The province revealed a record 397 people are fighting for their lives in hospitals across the province, while 120 of those are in intensive care units. The record for the most people with COVID-19 in B.C. hospital ICUs is 121, set April 12.

The number of those actively battling infections rose by 65 overnight, to 9,821 people. The vast majority of those infected have been told to self-isolate.

Newly detected infections continue at a high rate, with 1,168 cases identified in the past 24 hours. That is the fourth highest daily total B.C. has seen.

The new cases raise the total number of COVID-19 infections in B.C. to 114,870, since researchers discovered the first infection in the province in January, 2020. Almost 90%, or 103,360 people, are deemed by the province to have recovered. 

Glacier Media crunched B.C. data for the 2,041 infections in the past two days, to show the following age breakdown for those cases. The first percentage in brackets is for the last two days. The second percentage is for all cases identified before April 13:
• 146 were aged under 10 (7.2% | 4.9%);
• 255 were aged between 10 and 19 (12.5% | 10.1%);
• 461 were aged between 20 and 29 (22.6% | 22.8%);
• 346 were aged between 30 and 39 (17% | 18.3%);
• 322 were aged between 40 and 49 (15.8% | 14.8%);
• 253 were aged between 50 and 59 (12.4% | 12.7%);
• 151 were aged between 60 and 69 (7.4% | 8.2%);
• 81 were aged between 70 and 79 (4% | 4.4%);
• 23 were aged between 80 and 89 (1.1% | 2.6%); and
• 3 were older than 90 years (less than 0.1% | 1.2%).

There were 24 COVID-19 cases before April 13 in which the patients' ages were not known. 

Health officials are monitoring a record 16,304 people for symptoms because they have had known exposure to individuals identified as having been infected. 

Another six people have died while fighting COVID-19 infections in the past day, raising B.C.'s death toll from the disease to 1,521.

Here is the breakdown of where the 1,168 people with infections detected in the past day reside, by health region:
• 341 in Vancouver Coastal Health (29.2%);
• 632 in Fraser Health (54.1%);
• 64 in Island Health (5.5%);
• 105 in Interior Health (9%); and
• 26 in Northern Health (2.2%).

  • With files from Glen Korstrom, Glacier Media