Protecting Canadians from SARS-CoV-2 Transmission
"This is how the first wave started, it came from other countries, and some people who were clearly not observing the quarantine recommendations."
Dr.Jeff Kwong, public-health professor, University of Toronto
"The honour system is a halfwitted Canadian farce which all but guarantees that we will be reinfected from outside the country, and quite often, I should think."
"I have requested government do one of these three things [test all arrivals for COVID before entry; quarantine arrivals immediately in hotels; install an app to trace whereabouts for 14 days]."
"Government has never answered me."
Dr.Amir Attaran, public health policy professor, University of Ottawa
MATTHEW MCQUEEN / Director, Public Health Program, University of Colorado Boulder |
As far as Dr.Attaran is concerned, from his post as a Canada Research Chair in health policy, what bothers him particularly is the "total absence" of any measure of enforcement to ensure that people entering Canada take the 14-day isolation requirement seriously. Government doesn't appear to take protection of the Canadian public seriously enough to go beyond taking people's promise to accede to the rules as a point of public policy overcoming private unwillingness for the greater public good, so why should individuals?
Close to three million people have entered Canada since the borders were officially closed on March 25, a marked decrease of the numbers that generally crossed from the United States in Canada. The representative number reflects a roughly 90 percent decline in border crossings, as opposed to the usual numbers, according to Canada Border Services Agency statistics.
The issue of maintaining closed borders for all but essential workers and services is key to the ability of the country to shield its citizens from rampant SARS-CoV-2 contagion. And experts have been quick to point out that international travel introduced COVID-19 to Canada to begin with. Which meant that mandatory border closures should have been implemented, and taken seriously, with all the tracking required to ensure that those entering the country took the required precautions of self-isolating to protect the public much earlier than it did.
Canada has relatively low numbers of COVID-19 infections, with both Quebec and Ontario the two provinces with the highest infection rates, reaching a level of control and diminishing cases. Given the situation in the United States over the southern border, maintaining that closed border is critical. The U.S. reported 77,000 new COVID cases nationwide on Thursday, the seventh time this month record high cases were reported. Roughly half of the 50 states have mandated the wearing of masks, the other half not.
In total, 3.6 million Americans have been infected with the coronavirus, the highest count of any country. Over 138,000 Americans have died from the effect of the disease, a staggering figure of lost life. Florida, Texas and South Carolina all reported record COVID-19 death numbers for a single day, on Thursday. Texas announced over 15,000 infections for a single day. Infection rates altogether for Canada's neighbour have been trending upward.
Border restrictions are broadly supported by the Canadian public, approving of the extension to mid-August of the mutually-agreed-upon closure of the Canada-U.S. border. The fly in that ointment is not that the Canadian government claims that anyone entering Canada from abroad must go into a two-week quarantine, it is that the regulations are too lax. Of over 80 percent of the three million arrivals since late March, most have entered under exemptions whose category includes truck drivers, fishermen, soldiers, airline crew, critical infrastructure technicians and students working in health care.
Fewer than 380,000 out of the total of three million entrants have been "non-exempt", expected to isolate themselves for the required two-week period. Robo-calls and automated emails to remind the non-exempt of their obligations, augmented by live calls to check up on their commitments do occur through the Public Health Agency of Canada or through Service Canada officials. Yet hundreds of people with no intention to self-isolate or who have indicated they plan to, but fail to, have been answerable to follow-up by police.
Vancouver International Airport. (Hana Mae Nassar, NEWS 1130 Photo) |
There have been scant fines resulting for violation of these critical rules. "How effective the measures are cannot be judged by how many tickets are issued. Since March -- when travel restrictions were implemented by the government of Canada -- COVID-19 cases associated with international travel have decreased substantially, from 21 percent (3,703) of all cases in March to two percent (173) in June", advised Tammy Jabreau speaking for the Public Health Agency. "This (international travellers entering Canada) is how the first wave started, it came from other countries, and some people who were clearly not observing the quarantine recommendations", pointed out Dr.Jeff Kwong.
Live calls from a trained "screening officer" who rates the person's compliance through a series of questions have reached 175,723 people, advised Tammy Jabreau, for the Public Health Agency. The Public Health Agency has passed on to the RCMP the names of about 1,500 people who failed to honour their commitments. "These measures have been essential to slowing the spread of the virus within Canada's borders."
Labels: Borders, Canada, Global Pandemic, Novel Coronavirus, Self-Isolation, United States
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