From the CBC:
“Canada is
losing the race between vaccines and variants as the 3rd wave worsens”
Much of Canada
is in the grips of a worsening third wave as COVID-19 vaccinations slowly ramp
up, and experts say the spread of more contagious coronavirus variants is
throwing gasoline on an already-raging fire. "We have a lot of virus
moving around the country and escalating very, very quickly," said Jason
Kindrachuk, an assistant professor of viral pathogenesis at the University of
Manitoba and Canada Research Chair of emerging viruses. "Vaccinations are
certainly starting to pick up, but we're nowhere near where we need to be to
get this thing under control."
More than
15,000 cases of the more transmissible and potentially more deadly variants
have been reported across Canada to date, with more than 90 per cent of those
being the B117 variant first identified in the United Kingdom. But the P1
variant first discovered in Brazil is also on the rise in Canada, with cases
doubling in the past week to close to 1,000 — mostly in British Columbia,
Ontario and Alberta. And the B1351
variant first found in South Africa is also picking up steam, with over 150
cases identified in Quebec, more than 70 in Ontario and over 50 in B.C. as of
Tuesday.
But experts say
Canada's slow vaccine roll out has failed to keep up with the exponential rise
in variants in the third wave and the premature loosening of restrictions has
led to an increase in hospitalizations and deaths — even in younger Canadians. "People
were hoping that we could get to the finish line and get everyone vaccinated
without having to deal with another wave and unfortunately that doesn't seem to
be the case," said Dr. Leyla Asadi, an infectious diseases physician at
the University of Alberta in Edmonton. "That's
a combination of both our reopening too quickly and now you add in these
variants of concern."
Canada has
emerged as one of the only countries in the world with significant outbreaks of
three different variants occurring at the same time — turning us into a giant
experiment on the world stage. "There's no other country that's kind of
dealing with it as we are — we have all of them emerging at once," said
Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph's Healthcare
Hamilton. "What happens to all three of them in the mix? Which one takes
over? Which one is the fittest of the three?"
Variants
could threaten vaccine effectiveness Canada's Chief Public Health Officer
Dr. Theresa Tam says another unanswered question that has huge implications for
our ability to control the third wave is whether variants like P1 pose a threat
to COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness. "This virus might be capable of
evading the immune response," she said. "But we do not have an actual
vaccine effectiveness estimate that is solidified." Tam says she
has asked medical officers of health across the country to gather more
information on vaccine effectiveness against P1 in particular, while
encouraging Canadians to get vaccinated and provinces and territories to keep
public health restrictions in place. Amid that black hole of data, Tam
says Canada may be able to fill the international research void due to our
surging rates of variant cases — for better or worse. "We don't
have enough information from other countries, including Brazil, about how well
these vaccines work against P1," she said. "If Canada is seeing the
evolution of spread of P1, we might be a country where we will be able to
produce some of this data."
Tam says
scientists believe one specific mutation common to all three variants, called E484K,
could actually allow the virus to escape the immune response and even make it
possible for someone who has previously had COVID-19 to become reinfected. "That
was the initial event that caused us to be concerned about this P1," she
said. "There was reinfection in a particular person that already had
COVID-19 before." Tam said while
there have so far only been laboratory studies done on the antibody response to
P1 that showed in some cases there was a reduced ability for a vaccinated
person's antibodies to neutralize P1 — the evidence so far is still a
"signal of concern."
Officials
warn against travelling within Canada Health officials are imploring
Canadians to avoid recreational travel within Canada as the third wave rages,
but experts say stricter travel restrictions may not be enough now to prevent
widespread outbreaks of more contagious coronavirus variants. "Variants of concern are posing new
challenges in different locations across the country. Now is not the time to
travel for recreational purposes," Tam said Tuesday. "Limit your
travel to essential trips only and do your part to stop the spread. Deputy
Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Howard Njoo said individuals need to take
"personal responsibility to the extent that it's possible." "Stay
at home as much as possible, don't have any sort of non-essential travel —
especially vacations going from one province to another." Alberta
is reinstating strict restrictions at a time when variants are surging, with a
total of 676 announced Tuesday making up more than 40 per cent of the
province's active COVID-19 cases. Officials there are also investigating
several major P1 outbreaks at large workplaces, at least one of which is tied
to a traveller returning to Alberta from out of province. "Even before the
variants have taken hold, we could have been far more responsive. But we
weren't and now we're in a situation where we have these variants that are far
more transmissible," said Asadi. "We have to take far more strict
measures than previously, at least for a while until we can get the vaccination
rates up." Manitoba is the only province or territory outside of
Atlantic Canada and the North to implement strict regional travel restrictions,
requiring a mandatory 14-day quarantine for all travellers, and has so far
avoided a third wave. "Manitoba implemented it when they saw the variants
and the rest of us just didn't," said Asadi.
Ottawa
'losing the race' against COVID-19 variants: Etches "There's just this
reluctance to do anything that seems too drastic, whereas doing the same old
things results fundamentally in then having to institute stay at home orders,
which themselves are really quite drastic but become necessary once you lose
control." Ontario announced sweeping restrictions and a stay at
home order on Wednesday due to a surge in cases and overwhelming pressure on
the healthcare system, but stopped short of regional travel restrictions to
slow the spread of variants. Ashleigh Tuite, an infectious disease
epidemiologist and assistant professor at the University of Toronto's Dalla
Lana School of Public Health, says variants already make up close to 70 per
cent of Ontario's COVID-19 cases. "It's incredibly widespread, so I
think there's merit in restricting movement between areas," she said.
"But as a way to control the spread of variants? That ship has likely
already sailed." Kindrachuk said Manitoba's travel restrictions
have been a key part of their ability to control the spread of variants in the
third wave, but a recent spike in cases and variants locally could jeopardize
that. "Once they get in,
they start circulating a little bit under the radar, and then they start to
take off," he said. "Now what we're seeing is really it's
raging in basically all the provinces with the exception of the Atlantic
provinces, Manitoba, and the Territories. The question is going to be now, how
long can it be maintained?"
^ Canada (along
with most of the EU) continue to do a poor job dealing with new
infections/deaths and vaccination roll-out. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/coronavirus-variants-canada-covid-19-vaccine-third-wave-1.5978394
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.