1) Health Minister Christian Dubé admitted Tuesday Quebec is having a hard time retracing #COVID19 contacts as the province enters a second wave in the #pandemic. In this thread, I will appeal to the government to authorize the use of Health Canada's COVID Alert notification app.
2) An online consultation commissioned by the government found that 77% of Quebecers believed such an app would be useful, and 75% said they would install it on their smart phones. Yet despite the overwhelming public approval, the government won’t use it.
3) Ontario Health Minister Doug Ford has urged neighboring Quebec to authorize the app. Federal health minister Patty Hajdu has asked Quebec to use it. Quebecers want the app. Yet on Tuesday, even as Dubé declared Laval and the Outaouais to be orange zones, he ruled out using it.
4) During his news conference, Dubé cited disapproval by the opposition parties to the idea, and mentioned that the government might want to develop its own made-in-Quebec app. But given the urgency of the second wave, why not let Quebecers download COVID Alert in the meantime?
5) Any tool that can help stem the spread of the contagious #coronavirus is beneficial. Even some critics who initially questioned the app’s effectiveness have said it could come in handy during a resurgence, which in fact, is now occurring throughout the province.
6) The province is so short of epidemiological staff to retrace contacts that Dubé appealed to retired cops to get involved, noting their experience in law enforcement could be helpful. But there is already a contact-tracing app that can be of assistance, so why not use it?
7) The stakes couldn’t be higher. Dubé revealed the province is beset by 250 active #COVID19 outbreaks, up by an astonishing 75 in just the past two days. The province reported a spike of 20 hospitalizations, an increase not observed since May 13, during the first wave.
8) Meanwhile, the metropolis posted 142 new #COVID19 cases Tuesday. Please view the jagged but rising orange line in the chart below. Montreal’s seven-day rolling average is 61.11 cases per million population, which is taking place amid at least 53 active outbreaks.
9) At the neighborhood level, the densely populated very centre of Montreal — Côte-des-Neiges, downtown and Parc-Extension — have grabbed the lion’s share of new #COVID19 cases for at least the past three days. (See the chart below.) If this keeps up, who knows what to expect?
10) The health minister, @cdube_sante, acknowledged Quebec’s health care workers are tired and short-staffed. Among those exhausted are emergency-room nurses. See the ER chart below. So why not let Quebecers themselves contribute by authorizing use of COVID Alert? End of thread.
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1) BREAKING: Santé Québec has authorized 246 doctors' requests since April to become "non-participants" of the medicare system — and thus legally allowed to charge patients from hundreds to tens of thousands of dollars for services. See my exposé below. montrealgazette.com/news/health/ar…
2) This accelerated exodus of doctors from the public system to private-for-profit side comes despite the Coalition Avenir Québec government adopting Law 83 last April to try to reverse this trend. But as my investigation shows, it appears that the law still has a huge loophole.
3) That's because Santé Québec was actually given the power to let doctors opt out of medicare. Supporters of medicare are truly dismayed that the new Crown corporation that is in charge of health care in the province has let so many doctors go fully private in so short a period.
1) BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: Record numbers of Quebec heart patients are dying while waiting for their surgery. This crisis has become exacerbated as the newly-created Santé Québec and the provincial health ministry squabble over jurisdiction. My exposé below.👇 montrealgazette.com/news/health/ar…
2) Yet the health ministry appears to be downplaying this crisis, claiming hearts surgeons' warnings amount to a bargaining tactic. The facts show the problem has been growing worse. Nearly two-thirds of heart patients now wait past medically acceptable delays. See below. 👇
3) As the orange line in the chart below indicates, the number of cardiac patients waiting beyond medically acceptable delays is rising, and the blue line shows the number undergoing life-saving operations on time is declining. The chilling result: more and more sudden deaths.
1) Author @GadSaad, who has taken an unpaid leave from Concordia University, has just written this commentary in the New York Post, headlined: "How Montreal became the antisemitism capital of North America." Here are my thoughts on this topic.
2) Obviously, it's debatable as to whether Montreal is indeed the antisemitism capital of the continent. As many Jews are painfully aware, antisemitism sadly exists everywhere. But recent events in Montreal have caused many Jews here to feel unsafe. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
3) A friend just sent this text: "Recently, several of my Jewish friends - lifelong Montrealers - have made the difficult decision to leave the city. They’re not leaving for better opportunities or a change of scenery, but because they and their children no longer feel safe...+"
1) BREAKING: The lengthy #COVID19 summer wave is continuing unabated in Quebec, along with other parts of North America and even around the world. Here in Quebec, it has been associated directly and indirectly with 1,100 hospitalizations for the past 12 days in a row.
2) As you can glimpse from the chart below, the #COVID testing positivity rate in Quebec was 20.9 per cent as of Aug. 11, the most recent date available. The trend line suggests the positivity rate has yet to peak.
3) Although nowhere near as fatal as it was back in 2020 (when vaccination was unavailable), #COVID this year has nonetheless been linked to 675 deaths, 38.7 per cent of which have occurred in octogenarians. But 30 Quebecers in their 50s have also died from #COVID in 2023-2024.
1) On Tuesday, the Quebec government unveiled its 2024-2025 budget, with the biggest expenditure to be made on health and social services. In this Twitter thread, I assess whether this "Health/Education Priorities" budget lives up to its hype, especially when it comes to seniors.
2) As you can see from the chart below, the lion's share of spending in the budget is for health and social services, pegged at $61.9 billion — up by 4.17% from the year before. In contrast, spending on education — so vital to Quebec's future — will rise 9.35% to $22.3 billion.
3) But as far as health and social services is concerned, Tuesday's budget may be indulging in a bit of spin. The chart below states that Quebec will spend an extra $3.7 billion over the next five years to "support a humane and effective organization of health care."
1) "The pandemic is far from over," one of the preeminent experts on #COVID19, Dr. Eric Topol, declared today, Jan. 4, 2024 — three years after the world first learned of a novel virus that was killing people in China. In this thread, I take stock of what's going on in Quebec.
2) "The pandemic is far from over, as evidenced by the rapid rise to global dominance of the JN.1 variant of SARS-CoV-2," Topol noted in a Los Angeles Times op-ed. In Quebec, nearly one in two genetic samples collected was from JN.1 as of two weeks ago. It's likely higher now.
3) "Clearly this virus variant, with its plethora of new mutations, has continued its evolution ... for infecting or reinfecting us," Topol added. Although the updated booster is considered 60% protective against hospitalization, only 17% of the Quebec population has taken it.