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governments have provided significant funding to support affected
businesses and employees.
Canadians have largely accepted this middle-way approach,
and to date, the hospital system has not been overrun. There have
been, however, significant provincial variations in infection rates.
British Columbia, which acted the fastest amongst Canadian prov-
inces in response to the outbreak, has for the moment succeeded in
stemming what appeared initially to be a rather aggressive spread
of the virus, using measures assessed as relatively “stringent” by the
Oxford Stringency Index, developed to monitor country policies in
response to the pandemic.29 By contrast, infection and death rates in
Quebec and Ontario remain high for reasons not yet fully understood
although, as discussed earlier, outbreaks have been strongly corre-
lated with socio-economic deprivation.
Across Canada, the vast preponderance of deaths (82%) have
been associated with overrun long-term care institutions, with
accounts of personal support workers forced to abandon their jobs for
fear of the disease and for the health of their own families, sometimes
leaving the frail elderly dehydrated, hungry, covered in feces, and in
rare cases, left for dead. The military was called in to assist in Quebec
and Ontario,30 and in both cases, has issued devastating reports on the
conditions they found.31 Thus, while the Canadian approach has been
successful to date in fending off an unmanageable surge in hospitals,
a myopic focus on hospitals left long-term care homes and similar
institutions exposed.
As infection rates have begun to drop, some countries are begin-
ning to lift these measures, some gradually and others more quickly.
29. Brandon Tang, Sara Allin & Greg Marchidon, “British Columbia’s Response
to the Coronavirus Pandemic” (25 April 2020), online (blog): Cambridge Core
- HEPL Blog Series <https://www.cambridge.org/core/blog/2020/04/25/british-
columbias-response-to-the-coronavirus-pandemic>; Natalie Obiko Pearson,
“Behind North America’s Lowest Death Rate: A Doctor Who Fought Ebola”,
Bloomberg News (16 May 2020), online: <https://www.bloomberg.com/news/
articles/2020-05-16/a-virus-epicenter-that-wasn-t-how-one-region-stemmed-the-
deaths>. For the stringency index, see Oxford University, “Coronavirus Govern-
ment Response Tracker” (last visited 13 May 2020), online: Blavatnik School of
Government <https://www.bsg.ox.ac.uk/research/research-projects/coronavirus-
government-response-tracker>.
30. “Long-Term Care COVID-19 Tracker” (last visited 13 May 2020), online: National
Institute
on Ageing <https://ltc-covid19-tracker.ca/>.
31. For Quebec, letter from Colonel T M Arsenault, and for Ontario, letter from
Brigadier General C J A Mialkowski, both letters dated 19 May 2020 and on file
with the authors.
VULNERABLE
The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Titel
- VULNERABLE
- Untertitel
- The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Autoren
- Vanessa MacDonnell
- Jane Philpott
- Sophie Thériault
- Sridhar Venkatapuram
- Verlag
- Ottawa Press
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 9780776636429
- Abmessungen
- 15.2 x 22.8 cm
- Seiten
- 648
- Kategorien
- Coronavirus
- International