From the CBC:
“Eliminating COVID-19 cases in
Canada will exact too heavy a toll on society, health experts say”
Some public health and infectious
disease experts are pressing for governments in Canada to shift to minimizing,
not eradicating, COVID-19 while allowing society to resume functioning. The
open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and all premiers, dated July 6,
says aiming to prevent or contain every case is not sustainable at this stage
in the pandemic. "We need to accept that COVID-19 will be with us for some
time and to find ways to deal with it," the 18 experts wrote. Signatories
include Dr. Gregory Taylor, Dr. Theresa Tam's immediate predecessor as Canada's
chief public health officer; Dr. David Butler-Jones, the first person to hold
the post; Dr. Robert Bell, a former deputy health minister in Ontario; Dr. Onye
Nnorom, president of the Black Physicians' Association of Ontario; Dr. Vivek
Goel, former president of Public Health Ontario; and Dr. Joel Kettner, a former
chief public health officer for Manitoba. "The people who suffer most are
those in lower-income settings who are trapped in apartment buildings and who
do not have a nice deck or a cottage to escape to," said Dr. Neil Rau, an
infectious disease physician and medical microbiologist at the University of
Toronto who signed the letter. The basis of lockdowns and physical distancing
was to flatten the epidemic curve so that health-care systems wouldn't be
overwhelmed with too many cases at once, Rau said. Stamping out the virus is a
different goalpost.
The letter urges governments to
respond to drops in disease incidence with careful relaxing of restrictions. That
way, schools, businesses and health-care facilities could carefully reopen, and
family and friends could gather once again with confidence restored by
appropriate precautions, it said. To guide reopening decisions, disease
surveillance should be improved, including resources for public health to
conduct testing and contact tracing effectively, the experts wrote. "There
are many countries in Europe that will accept Canadians coming in by air and
not make them self-isolate, yet we make people coming from low-risk places in
Europe self-isolate when they come here," Rau said. "We don't even
have reciprocity." Rau would also like to see federal leadership to guide
the reopening of schools, which experts say is important to the academic and
social growth of children. "I actually think Quebec may be the best,"
he said. "Despite having high disease rates, they still moved ahead with a
lot of the relaxing of restrictions. I think that takes a lot of guts."
Protecting vulnerable groups: Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada's deputy chief public
health officer, said he agrees overall with what's in the letter. Njoo called
the various provincial approaches to reopening schools "a bit of a social
experiment" based on both risk management and risk tolerance. The
signatories are concerned that current and proposed measures for reopening will
continue to hit Black and other racialized groups, those in lower-income
groups, recent immigrants, Indigenous peoples and other vulnerable populations
disproportionately hard. "The whole issue of getting better data in terms
of race and ethnicity has come up and we certainly recognize that," Njoo
said. "I'm not saying it's being solved overnight, but certainly we've
made good progress in working with our counterparts in the provinces and
territories." Reopening the economy is a priority for Mohammed Kaidali. He
started driving a taxi in Toronto a couple of weeks ago to support his family,
including four children. While a rainy day is normally good for the taxi
business, Kaidali said he struggled to get one fare in 3.5 hours. "It's
very hard to survive," he said.
^ Politicians need to start
really taking the advice of the majority of the health officials. Simply
closing everything down and keeping everyone home is not a sustainable
solution. You can open places up and allow people out with restrictions. People
and businesses who do not follow those restrictions (wearing masks, social
distancing, etc.) should be fined. It may be a little convenient, but if it allows
the majority of people to leave their homes and the majority of businesses to
reopen then it should be done. Opening too early with no enforced restrictions is bad. At the same time staying closed for too long without even trying to opening with restrictions is also bad. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/covid19-reopening-balanced-1.5642689
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