Staying inside may have helped spur COVID-19 spread in Kamloops: medical health officer
KAMLOOPS — Almost three weeks into winter, and so far, the weather has been mild. However, the virus that kept us apart over the holidays has been the opposite. The week after Christmas saw a dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases across the city; 68 between December 27 and January 2. Medical Health Officer Dr. Carol Fenton suggests there are two reasons for the rise.
“One is that the air is colder and drier, which allows the virus to live longer in the environment,” Dr. Fenton says. “The other is that our human behaviour tends to be a little bit different in the winter. We tend to stay indoors, which protects the virus and we tend to gather together.”
Dr. Fenton says she hopes the guidelines around Christmas gatherings were followed throughout the region. She also mentioned she doesn’t have any expectations of case numbers rising any higher as we approach two weeks post-Christmas.