Many of the province’s new cases have been linked to private parties and said efforts are under way to get the message out for people to stop organizing and attending such gatherings through social-media influencers

People play beach volleyball at Spanish Banks Beach in Vancouver, B.C. on July 19, 2020.
DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press
Health officials in British Columbia and Alberta are crafting COVID-19 messaging targeted at young people in response to a surge in cases driven by those in their 20s and 30s.
In B.C., that means enlisting celebrities and social-media influencers with large followings to get the message out.
Since early July, people in their 20s have made up the highest proportion of new cases, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada. From July 29 to Aug. 4, more than 40 per cent of cases nationally for which data were available were reported in people 29 or younger.
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In B.C., they account for about 32 per cent of cases since July 1, while people in their 30s make up about 22 per cent. In Alberta, people in their 20s make up the largest proportion of active cases, at 22 per cent, while people in their 30s followed with 19 per cent.
B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix and Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry said that many of the provinces new cases have been linked to private parties and said efforts are under way to get the message out for people to stop organizing and attending such gatherings.
We are and will be finding people on social media, and influencers, Mr. Dix said this week. But I want to say to everyone out there, we are all influencers and we can all influence the behaviour of ourselves, first of all, but of the people around us and how we behave.
In an interview, Mr. Dix said the Ministry of Health had some success with a social-media campaign launched last month after a spike in cases linked to parties in B.C.s Interior. His staff reached out to local influencers, such as a lifestyle brand with 105,000 Instagram followers and a retailer with 30,000 followers, and asked them to deliver basic health information in their own voices.
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What were trying to do [now] is approach people from all over the province and, importantly, from different communities, including language communities, he said. Were not looking to pay people or anything, but weve found a real willingness to join in.
Its not all of the answer, obviously, but its an element of the answer to renew [messaging] and connect with groups of people who are now more largely testing positive for COVID-19.
Asked Wednesday who the province might reach out to, Premier John Horgan issued a public plea to a couple of well-known exports.
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This is a call-out to Deadpool right now: Ryan [Reynolds], we need your help up here. Get in touch with us; my numbers on the internet, Mr. Horgan said at a news conference in Victoria.
Seth Rogen, another outstanding British Columbian. We need to communicate with people who arent hearing us. The two of you alone could help us in that regard.
The B.C. government has paired with celebrities on such campaigns before. In June, Dr. Henry took over the actress Olivia Munns Twitter account for a day to share COVID-19 information. The province also paired with various Vancouver sports teams on a campaign about staying home to mitigate the spread of the virus.
Albertas Chief Medical Officer of Health Deena Hinshaw said there are several initiatives under way in that province to reach younger people, including focus groups that will inform continuing campaigns.
We know that different people receive information differently, and the ability to influence peoples behaviour is a whole science in and of itself, Dr. Hinshaw said. So were looking at what we may be able to do to reach out to different age groups, and be able to understand what the barriers are to their ability to follow the public-health guidance.
In late July, a series of parties in Vancouver resulted in more than 40 people contracting COVID-19, including three responding Vancouver police officers. Two patrol teams also had to self-isolate as a precaution, said Ralph Kaisers, president of the Vancouver Police Union and the BC Police Association.
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Dr. Henry said Wednesday that that event also resulted in second-generation spillover from people who were there who then went to other places and had other close contacts.
As well, several parties in Kelowna, B.C., around the Canada Day holiday resulted in dozens of COVID-19 cases, which then evolved into widespread community transmission. More than 1,000 people across the province also had to self-isolate.
Vancouver Coastal Health, which has followed more than 8,200 contacts since the start of the pandemic, said the average number of close contacts a case has climbed in recent weeks.
From June 24 to July 17, those who tested positive for COVID-19 had on average three close contacts, with a maximum of eight. From July 18 to Aug. 10, the average climbed to 10, and the maximum, 48.
With a report from Cherise Seucharan
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