http://balancedresponse.ca/open-letter/Canada - Open Letter
Date: July 6, 2020
RE: Dealing with COVID-19: A Balanced Response
The undersigned represent current and past leaders in public health, health care systems and academia. We are writing to you to with our
thoughts regarding a balanced approach to dealing with COVID-19 We strongly believe that population health and equity are important considerations that must be applied to future decisions regarding pandemic management.
The current approach to dealing with COVID-19 carries significant risks to overall population health and threatens to increase inequities across the country. Aiming to prevent or contain every case of COVID-19 is simply no longer sustainable at this stage in the pandemic. We need to accept that COVID-19 will be with us for some time and to find ways to deal with it.
The current and proposed measures for reopening will continue to disproportionately impact lower income groups, Black and other racialized groups, recent immigrants to Canada, Indigenous peoples and other populations. And it risks significantly harming our children, particularly the very young, by affecting their development, with life-long consequences in terms of education, skills development, income and overall health.
Canada must work to minimize the impact of COVID-19 by using measures that are practical, effective and compatible with our values and sense of social justice. We need to focus on preventing deaths and serious illness by protecting the vulnerable while enabling society to function and thrive.
Elimination of COVID-19 is not a practical objective for Canada until we have a vaccine. While there is hope for a vaccine to be developed soon, we must be realistic about the time it will actually take to develop and evaluate it and then deliver an immunization campaign covering the entire population. We cannot sustain universal control measures indefinitely.
We need to accept that there will be cases and outbreaks of COVID-19. We need localized control measures that are risk-based. We should consistently reassess quarantine and isolation periods, recommendations for physical distancing and non-medical masks, and travel restrictions based on current best evidence and levels of risk.
At the same time we must improve infection prevention and control in long-term care and congregate living settings. We should provide support for people living in the community who need to or choose to isolate when the disease is active, as well as those who have been adversely affected by COVID-19, or the consequences of the public health measures.
Canadians have developed a fear of COVID-19. Going forward, they have to be supported in understanding their true level of risk, and learning how to deal with this disease, while getting on with their lives back to work, back to school, and back to healthy lives and vibrant, active communities across this country.
We acknowledge the heroic work that has been done in recent months by many across all levels of government and the public and private sector, and the sacrifices that Canadians have made to get to this stage. As we look forward, Canada must balance its response to COVID-19.
Sincerely yours,
Robert Bell, MDCM, MSc, FRCSC, FACS
Former Deputy Minister of Health, Province of Ontario
Former President and CEO, University Health Network, Toronto
David Butler-Jones, MD, MHSc LLD(hc), DSc(hc), FRCPC, FACPM, FCFP, CCFP
Canada's first Chief Public Health Officer and former Deputy Minister for the Public Health Agency of Canada
Jean Clinton, BMus, MD, FRCPC
Clinical Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University
Tom Closson, BASc, MBA, FCAE, PEng
Former President and CEO, University Health Network, Toronto
Former President and CEO, Capital Health Region, British Columbia
Janet Davidson, OC, BScN, MHSA, LLD(Hon)
Former Deputy Minister, Alberta Health
Former CEO, Trillium Health Centre
Martha Fulford, MA, MD, FRCPC
Infectious Diseases Specialist
Associate Professor, McMaster University
Vivek Goel, MDCM, MSc, SM, FRCPC, FCAHS
Professor, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
Former President, Public Health Ontario
Joel Kettner, MD, MSc, FRCSC, FRCPC
Former Chief Public Health Officer, Province of Manitoba
Onye Nnorom, MDCM, CCFP, MPH, FRCPC
President, Black Physicians' Association of Ontario
Associate Program Director, Public Health and Preventive Medicine Residency Program
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
Brian Postl, MD, FRCPC
Dean, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences and Vice- Provost, Health Sciences, University of Manitoba
Former President, Winnipeg Regional Health Authority
Neil Rau, MD, FCPC
Infectious Disease Specialist and Medical Microbiologist
Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
Richard Reznick, MD, FRCSC, FACS, FRCSEd (hon), FRCSI (hon), FRCS (hon)
Professor of Surgery and Dean Emeritus, Faculty of Health Sciences, Queen's University
Susan Richardson, MDCM, FCRPC
Professor Emerita, University of Toronto
Richard Schabas, MD, MHSC, FRCPC
Former Chief Medical Officer of Health, Province of Ontario
Former Chief of Medical Staff, York Central Hospital
Gregory Taylor, MD, FRCPC
Former Chief Public Health Officer of Canada
David Walker, MD, FRCPC
Former Dean of Health Sciences, Queens University
Chair, Ontario's Expert Panel on SARS, 2003
Catharine Whiteside, CM, MD, PhD, FRCPS(C), FCAHS
Executive Director, Diabetes Action Canada - CIHR SPOR Network
Emerita Professor and Former Dean of Medicine, University of Toronto
Trevor Young, MD, PhD, FRCPC, FCAHS
Professor of Psychiatry
Dean, Faculty of Medicine and Vice Provost, Relations with Health Care Institutions
University of Toronto