1) BREAKING: A month after Japan downgraded #COVID19 to the seasonal flu, the country is now beset with a 9th wave of infections. In this thread, I will explore the persistence of the #pandemic that everyone — especially politicians — wants to forget.
2) First, it's worth noting that the number of #COVID hospitalizations in the nation of 125 million rose to 4,330 from 4,122 a week before. The seven-day average for the number of patients in intensive care units was 79, according to the Japan Times.
3) It appears that XBB subtypes of the SARS-CoV-2 virus are driving the latest wave of infections in Japan. Meanwhile, China has recorded a more than five-fold surge in the number of people diagnosed with COVID in hospitals since April. China is also bracing for another wave.
4) In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control on Thursday issued its forecast for #COVID hospitalizations. Its projecting daily hospitalizations from a low of 180 to a high of 2,600 for July 10. So much for a #pandemic that was supposed to be long over.
5) In my home province of Quebec, a total of 623 people were hospitalized for and with #COVID on Thursday, down from around 800 nearly a month ago. As of June 10, Quebec recorded 31 #pandemic deaths, on a track that's slightly lower than for the month of May.
6) And as countries have dropped their guard, the World Health Organization's technical lead on #COVID, @mvankerkhove, has expressed concern about remaining vigilant about new strains of SARS-CoV-2. See her tweet below.
7) The purpose of my Twitter thread today is not to fear monger or to warn of a coming #COVID apocalypse, but simply to state the facts that this pandemic is still around despite our collective wishful thinking in dismissing COVID as a thing of the past. End of thread.
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1) It is a sad day for journalism and a sadder day for democracy when news organizations have no choice but to resort to mass layoffs, as occurred yesterday with the announcement by Bell Media that it is cutting 1,300 positions across Canada. financialpost.com/telecom/bell-c…
2) My heart goes out to the many fine journalists who lost their jobs, and I hope they find new employment soon. Unfortunately, the mass layoffs at Bell Media are only the latest in a series of cuts to newsrooms, and they likely won't be the last. noovo.info/nouvelle/group…
3) In February, Québecor announced it was cutting 240 jobs, including 140 at the TVA network. And last January, Postmedia, which owns the Montreal Gazette, announced cuts of 11 per cent to its editorial staff. cbc.ca/news/canada/br…
1) EXCLUSIVE: With fewer nurses on staff, Montreal ERs now have to contend with patients who suffer from far more complex medical problems than 5 years ago. Here is my final story from this McGill report on the pitiful state of the city's emergency rooms.montrealgazette.com/news/quebec/mo…
2) Recall my story yesterday about how ER overcrowding is so bad at Montreal's Royal Victoria Hospital, doctors have no choice but to take more than six hours to respond to P3 patients who should be seen within 30 minutes under Canadian triage guidelines. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
3) What does this add up to? ERs that are less safe. Here's a story I wrote in April about the number of deaths in Quebec ERs rising steadily from 5,904 in 2018-2019 to more than 7,000 in the last fiscal year. How many of those deaths were preventable? montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
1) EXCLUSIVE: Montreal ERs are so packed, doctors often can't examine patients within the delays recommended by triage guidelines. At Royal Victoria Hospital, the average delay in May was 371 minutes for P3 patients who should be seen in 30 minutes. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
2) If ER doctors can't examine P3 patients within the recommended time frame of 30 minutes — and at the Royal Vic the average delay in such cases was a staggering 371 minutes or more than six hours — there's a risk a patient could develop complications.
3) Also recall a story I wrote in April about how the overcrowding is so bad at the Royal Vic that some patients were staying on stretchers in its ER for almost six days when they should have been treated in a hospital cardiology or internal medicine ward. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
1) Il y a 4 ans, j'ai écrit un texte sur une étude de l'Institut de santé publique concluant que les anglophones « sont toujours confrontés à des barrières linguistiques dans leur vie quotidienne, en particulier dans le domaine des soins de santé. » montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
2) Cet article a été publié avant la loi 96, qui oblige les médecins à s'adresser automatiquement à tous les patients en français (sauf en cas d'urgence), et avant le projet de loi 15, qui, selon un groupe, menace l'accès aux soins de santé en anglais. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
3) C'était aussi bien avant que le PM de l'époque, Lucien Bouchard, a déclaré en 1996 que « lorsque vous allez à l'hôpital et que vous souffrez, vous avez peut-être besoin d'un test sanguin, mais vous n'avez certainement pas besoin d'un test de langue ». montrealgazette.com/opinion/editor…
1) Nearly four years ago, I wrote a story about a study by Quebec's public-health institute warning that English-speaking Quebecers "still face language barriers in their daily lives, especially in health care." The story drew little attention at the time. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
2) Of course, that story ran before Bill 96 was adopted, compelling doctors to automatically speak to all patients in French (except for emergencies), and before the latest reform, Bill 15, which one group says threatens access to health care in English. montrealgazette.com/news/local-new…
3) This was also long before then-Premier Lucien Bouchard told a group of Quebec anglophones in 1996 “when you go to the hospital and you’re in pain, you may need a blood test, but you certainly don’t need a language test.” How times have changed. montrealgazette.com/opinion/editor…
1) BREAKING: One of Quebec’s most problematic hospital emergency rooms will be subject to a third government inspection next week. Here’s a follow-up story to my investigative series last February on rising deaths at Lakeshore General’s ER.
2) Meanwhile, staff at the Lakeshore ER anxiously await the results of an independent investigation that Health Minister Christian Dubé launched in response to the Gazette series of articles.
3) Since that series of stories ran, Lakeshore ER staff have told me the only improvement that has been made is fixing a single broken piece of medical equipment that is used in cardio pulmonary resuscitation.