Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada needs robust COVID-19 system: experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2022 09:37 AM
  • Canada needs robust COVID-19 system: experts

Experts say Canada needs to develop a robust system to detect COVID-19 activity in the absence of wide-scale PCR testing.

Since the onset of the Omicron variant, provinces and territories have scaled back access to gold-standard PCR testing, citing the lack of capacity to keep up with demand and the need to free up health-care resources.

Many people have since relied on results from rapid antigen tests, but they aren't as reliable at detecting the Omicron variant or reported and tracked the way PCR tests are. Experts say there needs to be a better way of informing people about COVID-19 activity in their communities.

Dr. Caroline Colijn, a mathematician and epidemiologist at Simon Fraser University, said there are currently "too many infections" in Canada to expand access to PCR tests to everyone to find out the true number of infections.

She said more robust programs could also be used to pick up other kinds of respiratory infections.

"And I suspect those are under development, but until they're developed, deployed, and results are publicly available, people will have trouble finding out what their risks are in their social group, in their community and in their workplace," she said.

"So then they'll have trouble having the information needed to inform their own choices, their own workplace or community policies."

Colijn said wastewater data is a really important source of information that can be publicly shared without compromising anyone's private medical data and can help communities understand the prevalence of COVID-19. But like PCR and rapid tests, she said it has its limitations.

She noted there are numerous factors that could change wastewater signals, such as rainfall, temperature and different variants leaving different amounts of sequencing in the water, resulting in less accurate COVID-19 case estimates.

Colijn said she anticipates an integrated system that would incorporate wastewater data, along with PCR and rapid test results, in a way that's designed to paint a more accurate picture of how much COVID-19 is in a population and inform people about the risk of contracting the virus.

"So we do need to think about how to get representative samples, and how to understand how many infections are out there," she said.

Dr. Dan Gregson, an infectious disease physician and medical microbiologist at the University of Calgary, said it would be reasonable to expand PCR testing access to certain settings like schools and long-term care homes in the event of an outbreak so they can make a decision on whether to close those institutions to prevent further transmission.

However, he said the average person can rely on wastewater data to assess the risk of contracting COVID-19 in their community since it's "much more cost-effective" and "tells us similar information" to PCR testing.

Dr. Peter Juni, scientific director of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, said it's "likely not sustainable" to expand access to PCR testing to all symptomatic individuals again because of the high cost of the tests.

Juni noted that when PCR testing was available to all residents in Ontario, only somewhere between 30 and 45 per cent of infections were being detected because not everyone with the virus was getting tested. Some may have been asymptomatic, while others may not have had time to get tested., and still others may not have been getting tested early enough.

As for rapid antigen tests available in Canada, he said they have shown "lower test performance" when it comes to detecting the Omicron variant.

What's needed is a COVID-19 detection system that can use a random sample in a population "to try to understand what's actually happening and which can be ramped up if needed," Juni said.

"If we see in wastewater, for instance, that infections start to increase, (then) we actually can really activate the system or extend it a bit, but it will be just a surveillance system that gives us enough situational awareness."

MORE National ARTICLES

Allegations of voter fraud in BC Liberal leadership should be independently investigated: Sharma

Allegations of voter fraud in BC Liberal leadership should be independently investigated: Sharma
Serious allegations of voter fraud involving the BC Liberal leadership campaign should be investigated independently, Vancouver-Hastings MLA Niki Sharma said today. According to multiple media reports, five of seven leaderships campaigns have sent a joint letter to the BC Liberals’ Leadership Organizing Committee alleging membership irregularities.

Allegations of voter fraud in BC Liberal leadership should be independently investigated: Sharma

Tightening rules for unvaxxed justified: experts

Tightening rules for unvaxxed justified: experts
As Quebec officials consider tightening the rules for the unvaccinated, health experts in the province say expanding the vaccine passport system is justified because of the high number of COVID-19 patients in hospital who have refused to be jabbed.

Tightening rules for unvaxxed justified: experts

Quebec to impose tax on unvaxxed

Quebec to impose tax on unvaxxed
Premier Francois Legault made the announcement as the province reported another daily record for virus-related hospitalizations. Of the 2,742 patients in Quebec hospitals with COVID-19 on Tuesday, 255 of them were in intensive care.

Quebec to impose tax on unvaxxed

Businesses eye rethink of parental leave in EI

Businesses eye rethink of parental leave in EI
It's an idea that has been floated previously, to hive off the special benefits for new parents from the EI system, given the growth in demand for the leaves, although how to finance it has been a key stumbling block. 

Businesses eye rethink of parental leave in EI

Zelenskyy talks Russia sanctions with Trudeau

Zelenskyy talks Russia sanctions with Trudeau
Zelenskyy delivered that message to Trudeau in their Tuesday morning telephone call, which came on the eve of a key meeting in Brussels between the 30-country NATO alliance and Russia.

Zelenskyy talks Russia sanctions with Trudeau

Slim majority support lockdowns amid Omicron

Slim majority support lockdowns amid Omicron
56 per cent of respondents in the poll conducted by Leger and the Association of Canadian Studies agreed governments are making the right decisions to limit the spread of Omicron and keep the health system from being overrun.    

Slim majority support lockdowns amid Omicron