Secrecy over B.C.'s true number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients
Just how many British Columbians are actually in hospital with COVID-19 is a tightly-held secret, with few privy to the true number as health officials keep two sets of numbers: one public, the other internal.
In B.C., the health minister has said COVID-19 patients in intensive care units are removed from the tally when they’re no longer infectious with the virus. That policy is in place even though they may spend months in hospital struggling to survive their infection as they occupy scarce beds and medical resources.
CTV News has asked the Ministry of Health for the number of patients admitted to hospital for COVID-19 but not counted in the public figures, but has not received a response.
Internal documents from Vancouver Coastal Health describe the patients as “off precautions,” meaning extra steps to avoid being exposed to the virus are no longer necessary. As recently as July, the health authority was notifying a relatively wide circle of staff as to how many patients were in hospital but not part of the public hospitalization figures.
For example, on July 21, an internal memo documented 38 patients hospitalized in the health authority, 12 of them in critical care, and another 29 described as “current hospitalized off COVID precautions cases” with an accompanying chart.
Subsequent memos to staff have excluded the “off precautions” data in favour of a “new streamlined version of the report,” with very few medical personnel now aware of the true number of people still hospitalized due to the virus.
Royal Columbian Hospital, in the Fraser Health Authority, calls those cases “time cleared” and their head of medicine revealed they still have COVID-19 patients who were admitted during the third wave of the pandemic in the spring.
“(Time cleared patients) can no longer infect other individuals, their COVID has probably run through in terms of the infective period, but the aftereffects on their lungs and other organs are still there,” said Dr. Gerald Da Roza. “So they're still in our hospitals."
PROVINCIAL HEALTH OFFICER WON’T REVEAL NUMBER
British Columbia’s top doctor sidestepped a direct question from CTV News about how many “off precaution” or “time cleared” patients there are in the province and why her administration isn’t being more transparent with statistics they track internally.
“What we present in our data is the epidemiologic numbers, and that's the way we've done it from the very beginning. It helps us understand severity of illness, that's the important thing from an epidemiologic perspective,” said Dr. Bonnie Henry. "Then there's the census information, which helps us look at health-care system impact on a day-to-day basis.”
CTV News asked the Ministry of Health to clarify Henry’s explanation with her, but the request was declined. We sent our first request for information about “time cleared” and “off precautions” patients Thursday and communications staffers have not replied, despite saying they were working on a response.
MANITOBA FULLY TRANSPARENT
While British Columbians are kept in the dark when it comes to the true number of hospitalizations, Manitobans get the full picture daily.
Their public health officials publish a breakdown of cases as part of their COVID-19 update.
“66 Manitobans hospitalized with COVID-19 including 32 people with active COVID-19 as well as 34 people who are no longer infectious,” reads the Sept. 20 update. “A total of 14 Manitoba patients receiving intensive care for COVID-19, including eight people in intensive care units with active COVID-19 as well as six people who are no longer infectious but continue to require critical care.”
Premier John Horgan has said his province is “as transparent as any jurisdiction in North America,” but that claim is hard to square with health officials’ repeated withholding of information.
While publication of the true hospitalization numbers is unlikely to impact how the institutions manage the influx of COVID-19 patients amid a staffing crisis, it would help British Columbians understand why surgeries are being cancelled, assistance to virus-ravaged Alberta is impossible, why northern hospitals are sending critically-ill COVID patients across the province for care, and open their eyes to the possibility of a long-term hospital stay if they’re infected by the virus.
Sept. 22, 2021 update: Criticism of B.C.'s ICU reporting policy has been swift. Click here for more on the response from researchers and doctors.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
From outer space? Sask. farmers baffled after discovering strange wreckage in field
A family of fifth generation farmers from Ituna, Sask. are trying to find answers after discovering several strange objects lying on their land.
This iconic Canadian song is turning 50
Andy Kim's 'Rock Me Gently' is marking a major milestone, as it celebrates its 50th anniversary.
Oprah Winfrey: I set an unrealistic standard for dieting
Oprah Winfrey said on Thursday evening that she has long played a role in promoting unhealthy and unrealistic diets.
Prince Harry, Meghan arrive in Nigeria to champion the Invictus Games and meet with wounded soldiers
Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, arrived in Nigeria on Friday to champion the Invictus Games, which he founded to aid the rehabilitation of wounded and sick servicemembers and veterans, among them Nigerian soldiers fighting a 14-year war against Islamic extremists.
Countries struggle to draft 'pandemic treaty' to avoid mistakes made during COVID
After the coronavirus pandemic triggered once-unthinkable lockdowns, upended economies and killed millions, leaders at the World Health Organization and worldwide vowed to do better in the future. Years later, countries are still struggling to come up with an agreed-upon plan for how the world might respond to the next global outbreak.
Toronto police called to Drake's Bridle Path mansion for another alleged intruder on Thursday
Toronto police say a man who allegedly attempted to access Drake’s Bridle Path property was taken to hospital on Thursday after an altercation with security guards.
Ontario family receives massive hospital bill as part of LTC law, refuses to pay
A southwestern Ontario woman has received an $8,400 bill from a hospital in Windsor, Ont., after she refused to put her mother in a nursing home she hated -- and she says she has no intention of paying it.
Flat tire on a highway? Here's why you shouldn't try to fix it
If you're cruising down a highway and realize you have a flat tire, you may want to think twice before stopping to fix it on the side of the road.
Storm-battered U.S. South is again under threat. A boy swept into a drain fights for his life
Dangerous storms crashed over parts of the U.S. South on Thursday even as the region cleaned up from earlier severe weather that spawned tornadoes, killed at least three people, and gravely injured a boy who was swept into a storm drain as he played in a flooded street.