Coronavirus spreads among Kelowna school population, 2 more exposures announced

The novel coronavirus continues to spread among schools in the Central Okanagan.

On Sunday, Central Okanagan Public Schools announced a new confirmed case of COVID-19 connected to the École Dr. Knox Middle School.

The person who tested positive for the virus is said to be quarantining at home as Interior Health (IH) performs contact tracing.

“The safety and well-being of students, families, and staff remains our highest priority,” stated a news release from SD 23.

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The school district also announced additional cases of COVID-19 involving members of the Kelowna Secondary School (KSS) community.

The exact number of new cases at KSS was not released.

“The health authority confirmed these cases are related to social interactions outside of the school environment and they are not related to any previously identified cases from Kelowna Secondary School,” the release said.




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The first KSS case caused exposures at the high school on Oct. 19, 20 and 21, according to IHA.

The second case at KSS caused exposure on Oct. 21.

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The school district and health authority will not publicly reveal if those sick are students, teachers or administrators.

Six schools in Kelowna, B.C., experienced coronavirus exposures in October.

They include KSS, École KLO Middle School, Springvalley Elementary school, Okanagan Mission Secondary School, École de l’Anse-au-sable and St. Joseph Elementary School.




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On Nov. 5, the COVID-19 outbreak at École de l’Anse-au-sable was declared over.

The outbreak, involving at least 15 cases, forced the closure of the entire school for 10 days.

Health officials said 160 members of the school community may have been exposed to the virus and self-isolated, prompting staffing shortages.

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“We know this is a challenging time for parents and children alike, and we remind everyone to carefully consider any plans, parties or sleepovers for children as these activities could lead to other school exposures,” said Interior Health chief medical health officer, Dr. Albert de Villiers.

Our public health teams continue to urge everyone to keep their social contacts small. Help us keep schools open and COVID-19 cases down among youth so children can continue with in-class learning,” he said.

According to the BC Centre for Disease Control’s COVID-19 test data, there are 115 active cases in the Interior Health region.

School exposures are posted to the Interior Health website here.

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