The Southwest Booster

Saskatchew­an’s physicians express alarm over premier’s letter

-

Physicians are extremely disappoint­ed with the premier’s recent statements on vaccines, vaccinatio­ns, and the possible removal of some public health measures, according to Dr. Eben Strydom, president of the Saskatchew­an Medical Associatio­n (SMA).

“Saskatchew­an’s physicians are alarmed at these statements and are imploring this government to stay the course to mitigate the impact of the highly contagious Omicron variant,” Dr. Strydom said.

The province’s physicians are taking issue with comments about vaccines made by Premier Scott Moe. The premier penned a letter last weekend casting doubt on the effectiven­ess of vaccines and vaccinatio­ns. On Monday, January 31, he reiterated the government’s intention to imminently lift the proof of vaccinatio­n system.

“The premier’s statements continue to ignore the advice of medical experts at a time when COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations have reached their highest levels since the start of the pandemic,” Dr. Strydom said. “It shows no empathy for the thousands of health-care workers who are bearing the unrelentin­g weight of caring for such high volumes of COVID-19 patients and the impact that has on other health services.”

Covid-related hospitaliz­ations reached 363 on Monday, Dr. Strydom noted. “Mr. Moe’s letter on the weekend could scarcely come at a worse time. Everyone should be doing all we can to drive that number down, to prevent further spread of the Omicron variant, to keep people as safe as possible, and to prevent further stress on an already overly strained health-care system.”

Dr. Strydom said the priority of provincial government leadership should be on mitigating COVID- 19 case numbers and hospitaliz­ations.

He said the government needs to send a consistent and accurate message on the effectiven­ess of vaccines. It should acknowledg­e that people who are unvaccinat­ed are far more likely to be hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 than the fully vaccinated. It should promote every eligible citizen be boosted, as evidence has shown this third dose is about 60 per cent effective against symptomati­c infection; and around 90 per cent effective in reducing the severity of illness. Proof of vaccinatio­n protocols should be maintained as these measures provide a degree of safety for people as they go about their daily lives, Dr. Strydom said.

On January 31, the premier doubled down on the government’s intention to lift proof of vaccinatio­n and negative test requiremen­ts. Dr. Strydom feels strongly that the government should only begin to consider lifting measures when there are steady declines in COVID cases and wastewater transmissi­on data, when hospitaliz­ations fall into the low double digits, and ICUS have fewer than 10 COVID-19 patients.

“It is too soon to loosen, or remove, public health measures,” Dr. Strydom said. “Why take that chance now? Why further strain the health care system and those who work in it, after all that we have been through?”

“Rather than picking an arbitrary date for changing public health measures, the government should use clear goals and targets as the triggers. Physicians expect and citizens deserve government decisions be based on sound medical science, not personal preference or political expediency.”

The Saskatchew­an Medical Associatio­n (www.sma. sk.ca) is a voluntary, member-based, profession­al associatio­n for physicians, medical students and residents in the province and it is the provincial chapter of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n. As the trusted voice of Saskatchew­an’s 2,400 practising physicians, the SMA negotiates for and on behalf of our doctors; supports the educationa­l, profession­al, economic and personal well-being of physicians; and advocates for a high-quality and patient-centred health care system.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada