Our plan to fight the third wave is a silent admission some Canadians are more valuable than others - Action News
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SaskatoonOpinion

Our plan to fight the third wave is a silent admission some Canadians are more valuable than others

This opinion piece is by Dr. Anne Huang, who isa Canadian and U.K.-trained physician. She was a former deputy medical health officer for the Saskatchewan Health Authority and Indigenous Services Canadas First Nations andInuit Health Branch in Saskatchewan.

Immigrants are disproportionately represented in jobs with greater exposure to COVID-19

A worker cleans the door handle of a downtown office building. Current wage subsidy programs don't meet the needs of workers who do not have employer-sponsored benefits and who cannot afford to miss work due to mild symptoms if they will lose income, Dr. Anne Huang writes. (Andrew Lee/CBC)

This opinion piece is by Dr. Anne Huang, who isa Canadian and U.K.-trained physician.

She was a former deputy medical health officer for the Saskatchewan Health Authority and Indigenous Services Canada's First Nations andInuit Health Branch in Saskatchewan.

For more information aboutCBC's Opinion section, please see theFAQ.

As COVID-19's third wave in Canada continues to mount, we're beginning to learn what cannot be readily conveyed by tracing the daily number of new infections: Who are the people behind the numbers shaping the vertical walls of the third wave?And whereare the fuelling stations turbo-charging the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus?

The truth is theyare largelyimmigrants and racializedpeople working in jobs most susceptible to exposure to COVID-19.

To not act in the best interest ofeveryone, including those least able to advocate for themselves, is a silent admission that some Canadians are more valuable than others.

My journey as a Canadian began in the English-as-second-language classes of a public high school alongsideother teenage immigrants from around the world.I have enjoyed many privileges that have allowed me to be trained as a physician in Canada, but not all immigrants or individuals of visible minorities are as fortunate as I am.

Sharing my knowledge in this pieceis a testament to what Canada means to prospective immigrants.

COVID-19 disproportionately affects visible minorities

In October 2020, Statistics Canada reported"immigrants are disproportionately represented in jobs with greater exposure to COVID-19," and that "34 per centof frontline/essential service workers identify as visible minorities (compared with 21 per centin other sectors)."

Further, visible minorities are overrepresented in industries worst affected by the pandemic, such as food and accommodation services, which has led to relatively higher unemployment rates.

WATCH | Dr. Anne Huang on why vaccination alone isn't enough:

"Vaccination is the long term goal but we are not going to be able to vaccinate our way out"

4 years ago
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Former Saskatchewan deputy medical health officer says we cannot vaccinate our way out of this crisis

In its one-year update on COVID-19, Statistics Canada reported that areas with the highest proportion of visible minorities (25 per centor more) experienced COVID-19 deaths at a rate doublethat of areas with the lowest proportion of visible minorities (less than one per cent). This contrast was even more pronounced in Quebec, Ontario and B.C.

After many weeks of leading the country in per-capita active case rate, Saskatchewan seemed genuinely surprised by the revelation that "coronavirus classic"and its upgraded versions, the variants of concern,have successfully breached the province's pandemic response.

While social interactions remained subdued by public health orders, invisible crowns of the enveloped RNA virus clad in its new B117-spiked armourgained a foothold. They nowreign in workplaces and households of public-facing and essential-service workers in the Queen City.

Ethnic origin or race-based COVID-19 data is not publicly available for Saskatchewan. However, based on national analysis conducted by Statistics Canada, it would be reasonable to assume that the pandemic has also disproportionately impacted the health, social and economic status of Saskatchewan's racialized communities.

Orjust pay attention next time to who staffs the windows at your favourite fast fooddrive-thru.

Many essential services cannot be performed at home

Yetthe latest round of public health measures announced by the Saskatchewan government on April 13 was devoid of details on how essential service or frontline workers will be protected from the rapidly spreading B117 variant.

This follows weeks of public acknowledgement by officials that measures which were adequate to preventthe spread of COVID-19 in the past are no longer sufficient to stem the current surge of workplace transmissions, and that if infected, the essential-service workers often spread the variant virus to the rest of the family or household members.

Providing workers with paid sick leave is one way to help curb the spread of the pandemic, according to Dr. Anne Huang. (Saskatchewan Health Authority)

Many of these essential services cannot be performed from home, such as meat or produce processing. They provide life-sustaining essentials in our modern world. Workers in these industries put their health and lives on the lineso the rest of us can work from home and order groceries, meals and goods online for home deliveries.

There are effective interventions to stop COVID-19 in its tracks:

  1. Upgrade personal protective equipment better masksand improve work-site ventilation. This reduces inhalation of virus-contaminated air in shared indoor spaces.
  2. Guarantee access to paid sick/pandemic leave. Current wage subsidy programs don't meetthe needs of workers who do not have employer-sponsored benefits and who cannot afford to miss work due to mild symptomsif they will lose income.
  3. Quarantine and isolation accommodation for infected workers. This protects the household and family members from in-home transmissionsif there is inadequate space to properly isolate at home. Household or family members of an infected essential-service worker may also work in public-facing jobs themselves.

The lack of such programs one year into a global pandemic in a resource-rich province invitesa simple question: Why?

The pandemic is not only testing the intensive-care unitcapacity or the economic reserve in Saskatchewan. It is also testing the grand vision of Canada a democracy built on a mosaic of diversities bounded by egalitarian values.

COVID-19 is testing our notion of what it means to be Canadian and we must stand on guard for that dream.


Interested in writing for us? We accept pitches for opinion and point-of-view pieces from Saskatchewan residents who want to share their thoughts on the news of the day, issues affecting their community or who have a compelling personal story to share. No need to be a professional writer!

Read more about what we're looking for here, then emailsask-opinion-grp@cbc.cawith your idea.

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