‘They’re all back’: B.C. medical experts warn of seasonal illness ‘tridemic’

Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix provide an update on the situation in B.C. during this respiratory illness season at a press conference in Victoria, B.C., on Monday. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Public urged to take precautions as influenza, RSV and COVID spread, and cases of pneumonia rise abroad

“They should not be let in.”

This is the advice given by a B.C. infectious disease expert for this holiday season if a dinner guest shows up coughing on the doorstep.

Brian Conway, medical director of the Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre, reminded people on CBC’s The Early Edition Monday that while we may be coming out of the other side of the COVID-19 pandemic, the same precautions must be taken this winter when someone presents with cold or flu symptoms.

A range of viral and bacterial infections are all back in circulation, including COVID-19.

“In Canada, there are 4,000 people in hospital, two or three deaths per hour,” Conway said about the current COVID situation.

Conway is not the only medical expert in the province sounding the alarm this respiratory season.

Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix also held a joint press event Monday reminding people to get vaccinated against COVID and influenza, especially before indoor holiday gatherings are in full-swing.

According to Henry and Dix, while COVID-19 numbers have dropped in B.C., the virus is still circulating and other respiratory illnesses are seeing a rise in cases.

“The good news is that COVID-19 activity continues to decrease and stay relatively low since the peak that we had in early October this year, while influenza A, on the other hand, and it’s mostly the H1N1 strain, and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) activity, are starting to increase,” said Henry.

Respiratory illness on the rise

Henry said adult visits to emergency rooms and primary care providers for respiratory illnesses have increased recently, as have pediatric emergency department visits. She said H1N1 appears to be the dominating strain of influenza circulating and that it can cause severe illness in younger people.

Anyone over six months can get an influenza vaccine, she said.

“It’s not too late to get that extra protection,” she said. 

Dix said there is an increasing demand for hospital services a month before the anticipated peak of flu season in the first week of January, and the province has increased its base bed capacity from 9,200 to 9,929, all of which are now being used.

The health minister said more acute and surge beds have also been allocated to address the “significant” numbers of people currently seeking hospital care. He said there are 170 more patients in hospital now than there were at this time last year.

“Throughout the system, we are better prepared than we had been at any time to deal with these large numbers of patients,” said Dix.

Stay home

Conway said he is worried about virus fatigue — meaning people getting tired of following medical advice when they have symptoms. He said only 15 per cent of Canadians have received the latest vaccine for the coronavirus that causes COVID.

“Stay home if you’re sick,” said Conway. “They’re all back. The ‘tridemic’ — influenza, RSV, COVID — they’re back.”

Conway also said Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a bacterium that causes lung infections including pneumonia, has been showing up more than past years.

Parts of the U.S. and China, along with several European countries, are reporting higher levels of pneumonia infections, while South Korean health officials announced hospitalizations for the illness have doubled in the last month, mostly among children. 

A middle-aged white woman with a blonde bob gesticulates with her hands while standing at a podium speaking. She wears a gold ring on her wedding finger and a gold ring on her right pinky finger. Bracelets adorn her right wrist and a smart watch is on her left wrist. Her top is black with a floral pattern.
Henry says the best way to protect yourself and others this holiday season is to get vaccinated for influenza and COVID-19. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

While there is no formal laboratory-based monitoring happening here in Canada, public health laboratories will be on the lookout for any unusual mycoplasma pneumonia activity, the Public Health Agency of Canada told CBC News. 

Henry said the situation is being monitored in B.C. 

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