
Dr. Bonnie Henry says 'new game' with Omicron variant could signal end of COVID-19 pandemic
CBC
B.C. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the record-breaking surge of COVID-19 cases in the province could eventually lead to a stage where the virus becomes endemic.
The province is currently going through its worst spike in infections yet, driven by the more infectious Omicron variant, with the 4,383 cases recorded on Thursday an all-time record number for daily cases.
In a year-end interview with CBC News, Henry said Omicron's spread was "unexpectedly fast" for the province's health authorities, calling it a "new game" of the pandemic.
She introduced gathering restrictions in response to the province's fifth wave on Dec. 17, and also announced on Wednesday that most K-12 school students would return one week later than usual from winter break.
"I agonized absolutely about making the decisions that we did on [Dec. 17]," she told CBC News. "I then spent that entire weekend agonizing more … I had to check my optimism bias."
"It was a very difficult decision, but I felt we needed to overreact rather than underreact at that time."
Though the province's daily cases are peaking, and contact tracing and testing are at full capacity (meaning B.C.'s true case counts are likely much higher), Henry says she eventually believes the province will see the end of the pandemic.
"The way the virus is changing with Omicron, that is leading us to that place sooner," she said. "The type of illness it's causing, with most of us being protected through vaccination, means that we are going to get to that place."
Henry says the virus will eventually become "endemic" as the season shifts to spring, more children get vaccinated, and the spread of infection slows, though she said there are still many unknowns ahead.
"I think we're getting there, but we're always going to have to learn some of the lessons from this," she said.
"Some of them are societal – around the inequities that this virus has exposed and the value that we put on different types of workers, for example."
Henry, who has been the face of the province's COVID-19 response with Premier John Horgan taking a back seat, says she never felt political interference over the course of the pandemic.
"I have tremendous respect for our elected officials," she said. "They have an incredibly important role and my role is to provide the best advice possible and to try and find that balance."
Henry also revealed that she has regular meetings with the opposition party, the B.C. Liberals, as well as with health officials throughout the country and province.