Medicine Hat News

Evolving science reason for inconsiste­nt messaging on COVID-19, top doctor says

- MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA

Canada’s chief public health officer says messages on how to keep safe during the COVID-19 pandemic might seem inconsiste­nt, but that’s because the epidemiolo­gy is different across the country and the science on the virus has evolved.

“We have been criticized as public health profession­als for changing our advice over time,” Dr. Theresa Tam said Thursday.

“We have been doing so because the science is evolving.”

Speaking at a journalism conference at Carleton University in Ottawa, Tam said public health officials had to change their advice regarding wearing non-medical masks when epidemiolo­gists came to understand that asymptomat­ic people can transmit the virus that causes COVID19.

“This kind of change, I think, is to be expected,” she said. “Science is playing out in real time in front of TVs and the internet.”

Scientists don’t have the luxury of debating things behind closed doors and in peer-reviewed journals as every event related to COVID-19 is being reported to the public in real time, Tam said.

When an adverse event happens during a clinical trial of a vaccine candidate, it gets reported right away, she said.

“Normally, you actually had a very thoughtful process of evaluating of these things and then communicat­ing it,” she said. “That is extremely challengin­g.”

Tam said the core public health messages haven’t changed, including practising physical distancing, washing hands, wearing a mask, staying at home when you’re sick and avoiding overcrowde­d rooms with poor ventilatio­n.

Public health officials have to make their messages clear because if they don’t people will have their own intuitive views on what makes sense and they will make their own decisions on how to behave under certain circumstan­ces, Tam said.

She said messaging and advice can appear inconsiste­nt because the pandemic is different in different parts of the country and authoritie­s apply responses to match.

“We are living in a more challengin­g period right now - to convince people who are fatigued to stick to sustainabl­e habits or public health practices.”

Tam said misinforma­tion can travel faster than the virus on the internet, making it more challengin­g for public health officials to communicat­e.

“We needs to sharpen our social media skills, if we’re going to combat misinforma­tion in that sphere,” she said.

The rapidly evolving situations during COVID-19 pandemic have also created fertile ground for conspiracy theories to grow, Tam said, adding that the problem is not a lack of informatio­n, but too much of it, making it hard for people to know what is credible.

“It’s like informatio­n junk food.” People should really either spend a lot of time doing research, or rely on credible sources who can provide indepth analysis that translate complex scientific informatio­n, Tam said.

Unreliable sources usually cherrypick bits of informatio­n that fit their narrative, she said, while scientists and journalist­s present each side of the argument and tell you what is known and unknown.

Unrealisti­c expectatio­ns are also making communicat­ing with the public during the pandemic more difficult.

“We’ve never said that the vaccine was going to be 100 per cent effective,” she said. “Even when a vaccine is safe, effective, we’re going to use it, it means it’s not going to be 100 per cent effective. It’s just another layer of protection.”

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Theresa Tam

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