Expect vaccine mandates to be mulled: minister
OTTAWA — Canada’s health minister says he expects the country to reach a time in the COVID-19 pandemic when provinces consider implementing a broader vaccine mandate to counter rising cases.
Jean-Yves Duclos told a COVID-19 briefing on Friday that such a measure was not currently being contemplated in Canada, but his personal opinion was that the country would get there at some point.
“We know that COVID-19 will be with us for many more months to come, maybe even many years,” he said in French.
Given Canada’s fragile health-care system and aging population, Duclos said he thinks provinces and territories will consider a broader vaccine mandate over the next weeks and months, while stressing that it would be their decision to make.
“The only way that we know to get through COVID-19, this variant and any future variant, is through vaccination,” he added in English, while noting other measures, including personal protective equipment and testing are important as well.
He also noted the high number of hospitalizations involving people who are not vaccinated.
Of the 40,788 hospitalizations reported to the Public Health Agency of Canada as of Jan. 18, about 79 per cent have been unvaccinated people.
People aged 12 to 59 years old were 25 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 if they were unvaccinated, according to PHAC’s data between Nov. 7 and Dec. 4, 2021.
“That’s a burden on healthcare workers, a burden on society which is very difficult to bear and for many people difficult to understand,” he said.
Italy on Wednesday made COVID-19 vaccination mandatory for people 50 and older in an effort to ease pressure on its health system and reduce deaths. France has ramped up a campaign to push the unvaccinated to get their shots, with President Emmanuel Macron banning them from restaurants, cafés, cinemas and theatres.
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney rejected the idea of mandatory vaccinations in a social media post shortly after Duclos’s press conference. While still encouraging people to get vaccinated, he said it is a personal choice.
Canada’s chief public health officer urged the seven million eligible Canadians who have not yet received a dose of COVID19 vaccine to do so, while also calling for everyone else to get a booster shot when they can.
Dr. Theresa Tam said the average daily case count rose 65 per cent from last week, with an average of close to 42,000 cases being reported daily over the past seven days up to Wednesday.
She said this is four times the case count during the peak of the third wave last spring, and even then, the count is an underestimate given that testing is challenged in many parts of the country.
While evidence from ongoing surveillance and international studies suggests the risk of hospitalization from Omicron is lower compared to Delta, the sudden acceleration of the new variant is driving a rise in hospital admissions, Tam noted.
She said an average of close to 3,650 people with COVID-19 were being treated in hospitals daily, with almost 600 in intensive care units, representing weekly increases of 91 per cent and 25 per cent respectively.
On average, 39 deaths were reported each day.
British Columbia’s Health Minister Adrian Dix said the system is threatened not just by the number of patients taking up beds in hospitals, but also the number of hospital staff who have to take time off because they’ve contracted the virus.
B.C. has paused scheduled surgeries to “limit capacity so we have space for patients with COVID-19 who may need hospital care and in addition, and just as importantly, to deal with issues of medical absenteeism,” Dix said at a briefing Friday.
The federal government expects an increasing number of requests for aid to shore up ailing provincial health systems in the coming weeks.