The Standard (St. Catharines)

Indigenous communitie­s struggle with getting PPE

- TERESA WRIGHT THE CANADIAN PRESS

Ottawa—indigenous health authoritie­s that service Western Canadian First Nations say they are experienci­ng problems accessing enough medical and protective equipment needed to protect their citizens from COVID-19.

Senior representa­tives from regional First Nations health authoritie­s in Saskatchew­an and British Columbia told a Commons committee Friday they need more personal protective equipment.

“We have delays in accessing PPE,” said Tara Campbell, executive director of the Northern Inter-tribal Health Authority in Saskatchew­an.

“On-reserve population­s’ PPE in Saskatchew­an are distribute­d by the province and unfulfille­d requests are then forwarded to the national emergency stockpile.”

She also said medical supplies such as thermomete­rs and testing supplies are not readily available and that nursing capacity “remains a critical issue.”

Campbell noted the key role that testing played in addressing an outbreak in the northern Saskatchew­an community of La Loche earlier this month, where extensive door-to-door and mobile testing was done to identify and stop the spread of the virus.

“By being able to test and get results sooner, we were able to isolate individual­s to make sure that transmissi­on was minimal,” she said.

“We aren’t able to do this in every community because testing supplies are limited.”

Chief Charlene Belleau, chair of the First Nations Health Council of B.C., said access to PPE has also been a concern for First Nations across her province.

The federal government has said it has been delivering large amounts of protective equipment to Indigenous communitie­s to ensure they are able to protect their citizens and frontline workers against the coronaviru­s.

On Friday, Indigenous Services Canada tweeted that as of May 22, it had shipped 845 orders of PPE to First Nations communitie­s and had one order in progress.

But Conservati­ve MP Bob Zimmer, who is the party’s northern affairs critic, says the accounts coming from First Nations chiefs and advocates at committee over the last few weeks indicate more of these critical supplies are needed in many Indigenous communitie­s.

Richard Jock, interim chief executive officer of British Columbia’s First Nations Health Authority, said his agency has developed a system to distribute PPE to its communitie­s and regions to ensure there is a few weeks’ supply to try to prevent critical shortages.

But supplies are low.

“I would not want to say that there’s a stockpile or an accumulate­d surplus,” he said.

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