Visitor vaccination requirement coming to B.C. health-care settings, starting with care homes
Full vaccination against COVID-19 will soon be mandatory for visitors in health-care settings across British Columbia, beginning with long-term care homes and assisted living facilities.
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the new requirement will take effect later this month, bringing facilities such as care homes and hospitals in line with restaurants, movie theatres and other non-essential businesses that already require proof-of-vaccination for entry.
"This supports and protects our health-care workers and the people receiving care and living in these higher-risk settings," Henry said.
"Those who are not fully vaccinated will not be able to visit in health-care settings as we go into this time of increased respiratory illness and challenges (relating to COVID-19)."
The visitor vaccination requirement in long-term care homes and assisted living facilities will take effect Oct. 12, the day before full immunization is becoming mandatory for employees and volunteers in those settings.
It will expand to acute care and community care visitors on Oct. 26, as the vaccination mandate expands to workers in those settings as well.
Henry said members of the public will be asked to show the same B.C. Vaccine Card they use while dining out and attending sporting events.
Some worried family members of seniors in care have been urging the government to implement such a requirement, with the backing of the BC Care Providers Association, which said the rise of the Delta variant has made the risk of visitors introducing COVID-19 into those facilities a legitimate concern.
"We have not seen visitors as a source of infection to date," CEO Terry Lake told CTV News on Monday. "But with the Delta variant, we know it's so easily transmissible, we think this is a possibility."
There will be limited exceptions to the visitor vaccination requirement, Henry said, including in palliative care and end-of-life care.
The provincial health officer also provided an update on the mandate for workers in long-term care and assisted living. While current employees must have received both shots by Oct. 13, or they will be forced to begin unpaid leave, those hired between Oct. 12 and 26 can begin work with only one dose of vaccine while taking additional COVID-19 precautions.
They also must be committed to receiving their second dose within 35 days of their first, Henry said.
Unvaccinated workers on unpaid leave will be under similar terms if they change their mind and agree to get immunized.
"If you do decide to get your first dose, it will be seven days before you're able to return to work with additional precautions in place," Henry said.
Workers who have asked for a medical exemption to the vaccine requirement will also be required to take additional COVID-19 precautions while they wait for their application to be assessed.
Earlier in the day, the B.C. Public Service Agency announced that all employees – including correctional officers, wildfire fighters, social workers and more – will need to provide proof of full COVID-19 vaccination by Nov. 22, a move that was applauded by the provincial health officer.
"We need to be showing the way and setting an example in our province," she said. "I commend these efforts and encourage businesses to consider this well-considered approach."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Donald Trump picks former U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra as ambassador to Canada
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump has nominated former diplomat and U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra to be the American ambassador to Canada.
Genetic evidence backs up COVID-19 origin theory that pandemic started in seafood market
A group of researchers say they have more evidence to suggest the COVID-19 pandemic started in a Chinese seafood market where it spread from infected animals to humans. The evidence is laid out in a recent study published in Cell, a scientific journal, nearly five years after the first known COVID-19 outbreak.
This is how much money you need to make to buy a house in Canada's largest cities
The average salary needed to buy a home keeps inching down in cities across Canada, according to the latest data.
'My two daughters were sleeping': London Ont. family in shock after their home riddled with gunfire
A London father and son they’re shocked and confused after their home was riddled with bullets while young children were sleeping inside.
Smuggler arrested with 300 tarantulas strapped to his body
Police in Peru have arrested a man caught trying to leave the country with 320 tarantulas, 110 centipedes and nine bullet ants strapped to his body.
Boissonnault out of cabinet to 'focus on clearing the allegations,' Trudeau announces
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced embattled minister Randy Boissonnault is out of cabinet.
Baby dies after being reported missing in midtown Toronto: police
A four-month-old baby is dead after what Toronto police are calling a “suspicious incident” at a Toronto Community Housing building in the city’s midtown area on Wednesday afternoon.
Sask. woman who refused to provide breath sample did not break the law, court finds
A Saskatchewan woman who refused to provide a breath sample after being stopped by police in Regina did not break the law – as the officer's request was deemed not lawful given the circumstances.
Parole board reverses decision and will allow families of Paul Bernardo's victims to attend upcoming parole hearing in person
The families of the victims of Paul Bernardo will be allowed to attend the serial killer’s upcoming parole hearing in person, the Parole Board of Canada (PBC) says.