Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dr. Bonnie Henry defends B.C.'s COVID-19 school plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2022 05:14 PM
  • Dr. Bonnie Henry defends B.C.'s COVID-19 school plan

VANCOUVER - British Columbia's provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, is defending the province's back-to-school pandemic guidelines against calls from some parent and teacher groups for more stringent COVID-19 protocols.

The guidelines released Thursday encourage pupils and others to get vaccinated and to stay home when they are sick, while masking remains optional and is described as being a "personal or family choice."

Henry, who called compulsory masking a "blunt tool," said the province will monitor the spread of COVID-19 and other viruses, and be ready to employ temporary measures when and if they are needed.

“We need to tailor the measures that we have for what we're dealing with now, and I think these are the appropriate measures for as we're heading into the fall," she said in an interview Friday.

"We are in a very different place than we were even a year ago with the high level of immunity and the exposure to the virus that we've had, and the virus itself has changed to where it's much more transmissible but doesn't cause severe illness."

Clint Johnston, president of the BC Teachers Federation, said the union believes schools require stronger measures than businesses or public spaces and is calling for better ventilation in classrooms and masking requirements.

"There is excitement approaching the school year that is always there, which is nice, but we hope that people are watching and that the Ministry of Health remains really agile," he said in an interview. "We hope that they are prepared and ready with contingencies and plans to address anything that does arise."

In a joint statement Thursday, the Health Ministry and Ministry of Education encouraged parents to vaccinate their children against COVID-19 and other illnesses and to keep them home if sick, saying this was "particularly important in advance of respiratory illness season."

"Wearing a mask will continue to be a personal choice, and that choice will be supported and respected. Schools will continue to have masks available for those who want to wear one," the statement said.

Jennifer Heighton, co-founder of Safe Schools Coalition BC, said the organization was "extremely frustrated" to hear the year would be starting "without better protections in classroom, such as universal masking with better masks provided and HEPA filtration."

She said school is an essential service that should be accessible to all children in Canada, but some parents are being forced to "choose between school or health."

"That's an impossible choice to make," she said. "It's an equity problem. It's a human rights issue."

Henry, who was part of the working group that crafted the guidelines, said she doesn't see broad mask mandates returning.

“It's a very blunt tool, and it's kind of a tool of last resort," Henry said. "It needs to be in the context of what's happening in the community and what's happening across the province, and whether there is a real need for that type of restriction, especially a legal mandate like that."

Henry said the province is now focused on encouraging parents to get their youth vaccinated against COVID-19 and flu.

"What's really important is staying up-to-date on vaccinations for all of the vaccine-preventable diseases that we give to kids," she said.

"As we move into October, November, December, I do expect that we're going to see both a surge of COVID this year and I'm concerned that we're going to see other respiratory illnesses that we haven't seen for a while, particularly influenza."

About half of kids between five and 11 in B.C. have had two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine so far, Henry said.

"It's not as high as we would like it," she said.

But she said about 90 per cent of children between the ages of 12 and 17 have had two shots.

Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, announced that Health Canada had authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine as a booster for children five to 11 last Friday. The dosage for children five to 11 is smaller at 10 micrograms, compared to 30 micrograms for those 12 and older.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization said children with underlying medical conditions or who are immunocompromised, putting them at greater risk of severe infection from COVID-19, should get a booster at least six months after receiving their second shot.

It said that as of July 17, 42 per cent of kids five to 11 across Canada have received their first dose.

Johnston said the union supports the province's efforts to get kids vaccinated, but is worried it won't be enough on its own.

"We fully support vaccination and we'd hope that everyone who can is getting a vaccine, (but) to prevent actual transmission, vaccinated or not, we're still looking at masks and ventilation as two of the really key pieces of that," he said.

The province said it has invested over $166.5 million upgrading and improving classroom ventilation since the beginning of the pandemic.

"This amount is expected to increase as school districts provide finalized costs for ventilation improvements funded through their annual facility grant allocations, with actual amounts becoming known at the end of the 22/23 school year," the Health Ministry said in an emailed statement Friday.

The federal government government also announced in March that it would be providing an additional $11.9 million to B.C. for ventilation-related improvements, but the Ministry of Education has not yet revealed how this will be used.

Kyenta Martins, vice-chair of the Vancouver District Parent Advisory Council, said the group is expecting a spike in COVID-19 as schools open and colder weather approaches.

"We know it's coming," she said. "Good air means everything. Parents want in-person schooling where the air is safe."

She said the group is also calling for more HEPA filtration and CO2 monitors in classrooms "so teachers are provided real-time data on air quality."

MORE National ARTICLES

Now 58 confirmed cases of monkeypox in Canada

Now 58 confirmed cases of monkeypox in Canada
Globally, there are 550 confirmed cases in 30 non-endemic countries where the virus has not usually been found. Tam warns that while we know a lot about how the monkeypox virus behaves in countries where it is endemic, we know little about how it may behave in populations that are both mostly unvaccinated against it and have no natural levels of immunity.

Now 58 confirmed cases of monkeypox in Canada

B.C. to receive money-laundering inquiry report

B.C. to receive money-laundering inquiry report
The Cullen Commission's website says its mandate includes making findings of fact on the extent, growth and methods of money laundering in B.C. and whether the acts or omissions of regulatory agencies and individuals "contributed to money laundering in the province or amount to corruption.''

B.C. to receive money-laundering inquiry report

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police
While the officer attempted to detain the driver, the driver resisted causing the two to fall into an embankment. As the officer took the driver into custody he was struck in the face multiple times and was spat on.    

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister
Marco Mendicino met with community leaders in Regina on Thursday at the annual conference of big-city mayors. He said it is important that the federal government develop gun policies that reflect the varying experiences of Canadians.

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets
Canada deployed a CP-140 Aurora maritime patrol aircraft from April 26 to May 26 to Japan, as part of Operation NEON, a multinational effort to support the implementation of UN Security Council sanctions on North Korea. 

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett
The threshold falls short of the 4.5 grams requested by the province and has been criticized as too low by some advocates who say entrenched drug users typically carry more.    

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett