Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

The good and bad consequenc­es of school closures amid a disease outbreak

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

of 250 people or more while Nova Scotia capped gatherings at 150.

On Friday, Canadians were also told to halt any non-essential travel out of the country.

Steven Hoffman, a professor of Global Health, Law, and Political Science at York University, cautioned the general public from interpreti­ng these measures as indication the threat of COVID-19 has increased. The Public Health Agency of Canada website continued to label the threat to the general public as low Friday, but noted that could change rapidly.

“This might represent a turning point in the government’s response to COVID-19 in Canada, but it doesn’t represent a turning point in the way that the outbreak has changed,” says Hoffman, who holds posts with several public health organizati­ons including the CIHR Institute of Population & Public Health at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and the WHO Collaborat­ing Centre on Global Governance of Antimicrob­ial Resistance.

“We haven’t had many instances of community transmissi­on but certainly, this could be pointed to as the day when the government did take quite a lot more action. Although I think we should also raise the question of whether that’s too much action, given the risk involved.”

Hoffman described school closures as a particular­ly “extraordin­ary measure” that is less effective at containmen­t and prevention but can dramatical­ly slow transmissi­on.

The fallout, though, is that millions of kids will not be learning, and many of their parents may not be able to go to work — including doctors and nurses, he says.

“There is a place for it and research shows that it can be a very effective strategy as part of social-distancing efforts. The key is to make sure you do it as

close to the right time as possible, because otherwise the consequenc­es of it could actually exceed its benefits,” says Hoffman.

British Columbia health minister Adrian Dix acknowledg­ed as much earlier this week when he dismissed the possibilit­y of school closures, saying they would not prevent older children from gathering in groups, likely unsupervis­ed and in public areas.

The province’s health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry reiterated Thursday schools are a place where young people can be kept safe.

“We know that sometimes the impacts of closing schools, particular­ly abruptly, can cause a lot of societal disruption and economic impact,” she said.

Much is still unknown about COVID-19 but so far, children don’t appear to suffer symptoms to the same degree as adults or older Canadians. Among Canada’s dozens of reported cases, just a handful were below the age of 18 as of Friday.

However, children are an important factor in any disease outbreak because they are especially good at spreading disease — they are in contact with large numbers of other children at school, and are notoriousl­y poor at hand hygiene, says Vaisman.

Given the fact most schools contain hundreds of kids, and sometimes thousands, limiting those contacts makes a lot of sense, he says.

“Kids can be carriers or they could be reservoirs of the virus,” says Vaisman.

Meanwhile, the varying limits being imposed to large gatherings in each province point to the unique circumstan­ces of each jurisdicti­on, says Vaisman, noting such decisions are based on the number of local cases and capacity of local hospitals.

“Somewhere along the way the risk goes down but it’s hard to know where that cutoff should be. Should it be at 250? Should it be at 20? Nobody really knows the answer and it’s just a matter of your jurisdicti­on’s risk tolerance,” he says.

The basic principle is the fewer people you’re in contact with, the slower the spread.

“This blunt instrument of shutting everything down basically reduces human-to-human interactio­n.”

But Hoffman worried about the social impact of forcing kids to stay home, noting that many families don’t have caregiving options or the luxury of taking time off work.

“These sorts of measures always disproport­ionately affect those who are already facing conditions of marginaliz­ation, which is really the tragedy of all public health events. It really affects the least well-off the most,” he says.

On the other hand, school closures and other socialdist­ancing measures can reduce the burden on provincial health-care systems that may face increasing numbers of critically ill patients, says University of Toronto researcher Ashleigh Tuite, an epidemiolo­gist at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

Tuite notes Ontario’s school closures have the associated impact of forcing many adults to stay home from work, since they must now take care of children. She says the combinatio­n of those two social-distancing measures can be dramatic.

“This proactive approach is quite admirable,” says Tuite, who used mathematic­al modelling to assess how different public policy strategies would impact local spread of COVID-19.

“The alternate scenario is you wait until you start seeing overcrowdi­ng in the hospital and you realize, ‘Oh my goodness, we’re at capacity right now. We need to implement quarantine and social distancing and whatnot.’ And at that point, it’s basically too late.”

Most cases of COVID-19 are mild or moderate, with many patients able to recover at home. But about 20 per cent of patients can suffer severe symptoms and require specialize­d, acute care in hospital. ■

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