As 3rd wave takes hold, Quebec hopes to thread the needle - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:17 AM | Calgary | -16.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
MontrealAnalysis

As 3rd wave takes hold, Quebec hopes to thread the needle

In Ontario, the pandemic situation was described as "out of control" on Monday, while in the United Statesa top official delivered an apocalyptic warning. But in Quebec, where coronavirus variants are surging and restrictions have recently been eased, the government is holding steady.

Other provinces struggle with variants, but premier says Quebec's situation is different

Quebec Premier Franois Legault gets a first vaccine dose on March 27, 2021. The premier said hospitalization projections show an increase in the days ahead, but still within the system's capacity. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

In Ontario, the pandemic situation was described as "out of control" on Monday, while in the United Statesa top official delivered an apocalyptic warning. But in Quebec, where coronavirus variants are surging and restrictions have recently been eased, the government is holding steady.

Thus far, Premier Franois Legault and his top officials have ignored criticism from health-care experts andexpressed confidence that Quebec's vaccination campaign will mean it can thread the needle: avoid tightening public health restrictions while keeping hospitalizations relatively low.

"What we look at is the increase in hospitalizations," Legault said during his briefingon Tuesday. "Every weekend I see the projections and in those we could see two things: an increase in cases and an increase of the number of hospitalizations but within the capacity we can handle."

The Legault government's more singular focus on hospitalizations and intensive care unit occupancy centres around the assumption that outbreaks and rising case counts in the now-declared third wave won't have the same urgency as in previous waves.

WATCH| Quebec Premier Franois Legault shares his concern about fiveregions

The next few days will be critical: Several Quebec regions see increase in COVID-19 cases

3 years ago
Duration 1:24
Quebec Premier Franois Legault says five regions, including the Outaouais, have seen an increase in the number of positive COVID-19 cases and warned of rising hospitalizations if the trend continues.

With variants on the rise, Legault said, an increase in cases was expected. He said the government is keeping a constant eye on hospitalization numbers, region by region.

He warned of even tighter restrictions if trends worsen,but for now sees no reason to adjust restrictions.

Quebec's situation 'different,' Legault says

That approach comes even as concerns are multiplying elsewhere and new measures are introduced.

In Ontario, variants make up a clear majority of new infections and hospitalizations and ICU occupancy have risen significantly. Dr. Peter Juni, a top scientific advisor for the province, said Monday there is "no way out" of a dire situation without a lockdown.

On Monday, with new infections gathering speed, British Columbia imposed a three-week "circuit breaker"-style lockdown.

In the United States, where vaccination efforts are substantially ahead of those in Quebec, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Monday of "impending doom."

Legault said Quebec's situation is different.

"Our situation is now better," he said. "Our measures are tougher, including the curfew at 9:30. All the restaurants, for 60 per cent of Quebec, in red zones, are closed. We have to take that into consideration when we compare to other provinces or the United States."

Following a path

Some are not reassured by the government's moves, however. In recent days various experts and groups, including the Collge des mdecins du Qubec and the Quebec order of nurses have asked the government to reconsider the relaxation of restrictions.

"The measures are exactly what will allow Quebec to follow the path that other countries and our neighbouring province of Ontario are going through right now," said Maude Laberge, a professor at UniversitLaval and a researcher in population health. "Meaning:exponential growth of cases and eventually of hospitalizations."

Because many of the most vulnerable people have been vaccinated, she said, "the delay between the growth in cases and hospitalizations is going to be increased, but that doesn't mean it's not going to happen."

Prativa Baral, an epidemiologist and doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said at this stage the government should slow down its efforts to relax restrictions.

Baralacknowledged thatto preserve "mental health and emotional development and social development and so on," schools should stay open.

"But other things, like opening up theatres and opening up houses of worship for 250 people, that to me seems a little premature," she said.

"The virus doesn't really care if you're there for prayer or for theatre what it really sees is a crowd of people and 250 people indoors is just asking the virus to spread faster."

A demonstrator marches inside a plastic ball during a weekend protest in Montreal against the Quebec government's public health measures to curb the spread of COVID-19. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

The government's task is made more complex byincreasingly fragmented public opinion.

There are parents very upset about their children going to school and others who feel the opposite. Some people want more restrictions and the virus stamped out entirely, while others feel that their liberties have been trampled for too long.

And there are those who, buoyed by rampant disinformation campaigns, have embraced conspiracy theories that dispute the severity of the disease and dismiss the facts of packed hospitals and high death tolls.

On Tuesday, Legaultreiterated a common request for the public to follow the rules and noted that"the problem is not the rules in place but the people who don't follow them."

But a few days earlier, he acknowledgedthat if restrictions were too strict, people mightstop following them altogether.

"Regarding measures, we need to have a balance," he said. "If we want the population to follow the measures we have in place, we need to have a balance."

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your daily guide to the coronavirus outbreak. Get the latest news, tips on prevention and your coronavirus questions answered every evening.

...

The next issue of the Coronavirus Brief will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.