National Post

Christmas is coming, or is it? Canadians weary of COVID cancellati­ons

- Sharon Kirkey

Psychologi­st Baruch Fischhoff is considered a giant in the field of risk communicat­ion and decision-making. When asked for his quick analysis of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s somewhat un- prime- ministeria­l assessment this week that the COVID-19 pandemic “really sucks,” and that unless people are “really, really careful” usual holiday gatherings might be off the table, Fischhoff offered that, for people predispose­d to the PM, “it probably speaks to their heart that he’s really worried and he’s willing to kind of let his profession­al guard down.”

Too often COVID risk communicat­ions have been chaotic, don’t recognize the diversity of situations people are in, and are too focused on rules, Fischhoff said — “‘ thou shalt X’ without giving people a mental model of why that is true.

“And the mental model that people need here is not all that complicate­d — it’s something about how much disease is out there, how is it transmitte­d in different kinds of settings, how well different practices protect you, how likely are you able to actually implement practices when you’re having a good time.”

The current COVID outlook doesn’t promise a huge number of good times ahead. “It’s going to be a tough winter,” Trudeau warned this week.

“This winter will be difficult,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Thursday as that country prepares for a month- long partial shutdown beginning Monday. French President Emmanuel Macron said in a televised speech announcing a new national lockdown until Dec. 1 “The virus is circulatin­g at a speed that not even the most pessimisti­c forecasts had anticipate­d.”

In Canada, COVID-19 is surging outside the Atlantic Bubble and Northern Canada. In Manitoba, Premier Brian Pallister this week upbraided those Manitobans doing “dumb things” to “grow up.” The province’s chief public health officer said some of those testing positive have had “way too many contacts,” so many they can’t remember them all. And despite pleas to limit turkey dinners to “immediate households,” Thanksgivi­ng weekend is being tied to rising case counts in Ontario, Manitoba and Alberta.

After months of well- meaning but sometimes cloying slogans, about marathons and sprints and “we’re all in this together” — COVID, as the annual report this week from Canada’s chief public health officer highlighte­d, is in fact disproport­ionately harming and killing the marginaliz­ed, racialized communitie­s and the elderly, not the privileged and powerful. A new Ipsos poll for Global News suggests Canadians are feeling sapped; half ( 48 per cent) said they’re tired of COVID public health recommenda­tions and rules. While the majority ( nine in 10) are following masking rules, parents ( 88 per cent) were less likely than those without kids ( 94 per cent) to say they’re doing everything they can — “perhaps an indictment of how workable many social distancing measures are in practice for those with young families,” the pollster said in a release.

Renowned epidemiolo­gist Dr. Michael Osterholm says a trifecta of fatigue, anger and winter weather that will drive people indoors is creating a perfect incubator for COVID. Add in the holidays, with travel and family get-togethers, “and we’re going to see a major increase in transmissi­on in family settings or social settings around the holidays,” predicted Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy ( CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota. Osterholm, by the way, in a Jan. 20 statement, warned that the coronaviru­s would cause a global pandemic.

Without vaccines, “We’re in this period where we don’t really have anything to offer people to limit transmissi­on except their own behaviour at a time when that is a huge challenge to get the public to do it,” Osterholm said.

“If you just make it all dark with no hope, that’s not helpful.”

We’re somewhere between total darkness and total light, he said, borrowing time until vaccines are approved. “What we’re really trying to give people is a sense that this is your

COVID year. It’s not going to be like last year. But hopefully it’s not going to be for next year if we have vaccines,” Osterholm said.

To that end, people should limit holiday gatherings to their bubbles, he said. “Don’t fall for some concoction that says, ‘ well, we’ll all get together in the dining room and the kitchen and the living room, and we’ ll all stay 15- feet apart and, oh, by the way, there are 32 of us in that dining room, kitchen or living room.’ How are you gonna do that? That math doesn’t work out here,” Osterholm said on a CIDRAP podcast this week.

Dr. Zain Chagla has called “cancellati­on pushback” a canary in the coal mine. “We’ve got several months/ possibly years here — if the attitude is nope, people are going to stop listening,” Chagla, an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph’s Healthcare in Hamilton tweeted after health authoritie­s urged no trick- ortreating in Ontario hot spots.

Businesses, urban planners, regional and municipal government­s can help create opportunit­ies for people to get low- risk human contact, Chagla said.

“Outdoors is still OK — it has to be done safely where something like the Rose Garden doesn’t occur,” he said, referring to the White House supersprea­der event.

“Maybe Christmas is not the typical indoor event where you have 12 family and a large dinner and people sleeping over,” Chagla said, “but maybe dedicated green space where kids could meet Santa, decorative lights that get people inspired, pot lucks or markets. They’re not going to be zero- risk, but you can make them low-risk.”

It’s possible that people who paid little heed to limit their Thanksgivi­ng gatherings to their households “thought they were taking a reasonable risk, but didn’t understand what that meant,” said Fischhoff, of Carnegie Mellon University. Concepts like exponentia­l growth can be difficult for the public to grasp. But it also didn’t help that there were differing definition­s of “immediate household.”

“We learn top- down from principles if they’re well- establishe­d, and bottom- up from personal experience­s,” Fischhoff said. The ordeal of getting tested and waiting for results becomes something visceral. “Some might say it wasn’t such a big deal, but others will say, ‘ I don’t want to go through that again, I didn’t sleep for a week.’”

Risk communicat­ions should avoid simplistic solutions; they should be respectful, informed, and people should be treated like adults, Fischhoff said.

“I think people could be helped with better informatio­n and better options. That will be enough for a lot of people, given they don’t want to get sick and they don’t want to get other people sick,” he said. “They will say there is light at the end of the tunnel. ‘ Eight months from now life will become more normal. I want to be there when we get to the end of the tunnel.’

“For other people, it won’t be enough, but it might become once the horror stories continue to spread. I don’t know how many people are zero or one degree from a serious scare.”

IF YOU JUST MAKE IT ALL DARK WITH NO HOPE, THAT’S NOT HELPFUL.

 ?? Peter J. Thompson / National Post ?? Christmas decoration­s are being set up outside of Hudson’s Bay flagship store in Toronto on Thursday. Health officials have warned that merry-making may be curtailed.
Peter J. Thompson / National Post Christmas decoration­s are being set up outside of Hudson’s Bay flagship store in Toronto on Thursday. Health officials have warned that merry-making may be curtailed.

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