P.E.I. doctor helping keep Royal Canadian Navy safe from COVID-19 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:33 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

P.E.I. doctor helping keep Royal Canadian Navy safe from COVID-19

Barely a week after taking up his new post with the Royal Canadian Navy in 2020, Lieutenant Commander Mitchell Drake began the process of keeping this country's sailors safe while ensuring our ships were able to carry out their missions during a global pandemic.

Dr. Mitchell Drake is the military equivalent of a chief public health officer

Lieutenant Commander Mitchell Drake began his work as fleet surgeon just as COVID-19 was becoming a concern in Canada. (DND/Capt Irene Doucette)

Lieutenant CommanderMitchell Drake took on a new job in March of 2020, and since then the Island-born physician's main taskhas been keeping Royal Canadian Navy members safe from COVID-19 while ensuring they remainmobile.

"It's fascinating to kind of look at the best evidence and tools that wehave to advise on mitigating that risk using things like quarantining and testing protocols to get that risk level down and avoid outbreaks,"Drake said in an interview fromVictoria, B.C.

For more than a year now, Drake has been serving as fleet surgeon for Maritime Forces Pacific at Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt.

Part of his vast duties include being the senior medical authority, the military equivalent of a chief public health officer. Instead of meeting with politicians, though, he advises military commanders on the latest science and steps to deal with COVID-19.

About a week after taking over the position, the base began putting protocols in place to protect military members from what was still being called the novel coronavirus.However, it was always clear that Canada would not stand down on its military commitments because of the pandemic.

"If you look at it from a population density standpoint, ships and submarines have higher population densities than the largestcities in the world. So that is the real challenge," said Drake.

The Canadian military hasits own scientists, including physicians, who were at work early in the pandemic, using modelling and other data to create a set of guidelines to let the military keep working as it kept COVID-19 at bay.

Drake (left) at a mobile COVID-19 testing clinic in British Columbia. ( Supplied/ Captain Lisa Bowry)

It fell to the force's top medical doctors, including Drake, to put the guidelines into action.

For example, picture conducting drive-throughtesting for 750 navy members heading into quarantine before naval exercises.

The rules were strict:Each sailor was to self-isolate in military accommodations or hotel rooms before reporting to the ship, meals were delivered to the door ifrooms couldn't be stocked in advance, and there were up to three COVID-19 tests before each person was allowed to boardthe ship.

This past December, at a time when case counts were rising in B.C., Canada's sailors headed out to sea. Drake says if everyone involved is COVID-free, floating in the ocean is one of the safest places in the world.

Not all countries have been as successful as Canada. At least five navies around the world have had onboard COVID-19 outbreaks to deal with over the past year.

Drake, who has spent time onboard ships as well, says the work in advance of the deployment also meant navy members could get back to their families quicker when they returned to shore.

'A very PEI story'

Another part ofDrake's job is to makesure navy members are following the provincial health rules of British Columbia. Those rules are set by Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry a fellow native of his home province.
Drake began with the Navy part time as a university student after seeing a relative join the reserve unit, HMCS Queen Charlotte, in Charlottetown. (Supplied/ Joshua Erlandson)

"Yes, it's a very P.E.I. story both from the Island, we went to Dalhousie University for medical school," Drake said with a laugh. "She was out here on the West Coast for a number of years. And shortly before she retired, she was the fleet surgeon out here, which, of course iswhat I do now."

Drake said his now-civilian public health colleague is a valuable resource, understanding as she does the need of the military to stay mobile while most of Canada has been told to stay put.The provincial health authority processes COVID-19 testsand does contact tracing for Drake's team when needed.

On another note, Drake hopes his own military journey may help get more young Islanders to explore the world.

Growing up in Vernon Bridge, he joined HMCS Queen Charlotte while studying as an undergrad at UPEIin Charlottetown. He continued serving through medical school in Halifax and his residency at the University of Calgary before joining the forces full time.

"I'm in a privileged position to be able to have an impact," he added, given what the world is facing during this pandemic."You know, it's great to be involved in that sense.

"But certainly I'm looking forward to a return of some semblance ofnormalcy in the near future."

More from CBCP.E.I.