COVID-19's devastating toll on families in Montreal's poorest neighbourhoods - Action News
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Montreal

COVID-19's devastating toll on families in Montreal's poorest neighbourhoods

Sony Innocent, 39, who died in his apartment while paramedics donned protective equipment outside, is likely one more victim of the coronavirus, which is ravaging his Montral-Nord neighbourhood and of the stark health inequalities the pandemic is revealing.

'Anyone who sees these health inequalities emerge is completely unsurprised,' says public health ethicist

People in Montral-Nord lined up at a COVID-19 testing clinic on Thursday. Their neighbourhood is one of Canada's poorest, and one of the worst-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Over the phone, the voice of Marie Missoule Michaud's two-year-old son rings out in the background: "Papa, papa."

"He still asks for him. He looks for him all over," Michaud says.

Her son's father, Sony Innocent, 39, died two weeks ago from what Michaudbelieves werecomplications of the coronavirus, though he was never tested.

Michaud says it started with a fever Innocent attributed at first to the bouts of malaria he'd experienced since he was a child in Haiti. But when the fever went away, he got a bad cough.

Then, on April 30, his lungs started hurting, and he had trouble breathing.

Michaud called 911, but Innocent died as paramedics were putting on their protective equipment outside the couple'sMontral-Nord apartment complex.

Sony Innocent died from from what his partner suspects were complications from COVID-19, though he was never tested. Innocent worked the night shift at a plastics plant and had been deemed an essential worker. (Submitted by Marie Missoule Michaud)

"I was screaming, and I could see police officers running so fast toward the house," said Michaud. "But it was too late."

She isn't sure how Innocent might have caught the virus. He worked at a plastics factory and had been deemed an essential worker, heading out every daywhile others stayed home.

Montral-Nord, the borough where they'd settled, now has the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Montreal, the epicentre of the pandemic in Canada.

Itis also one of the poorestdistricts in Canada. The median income is $23,412,and the unemployment rate in the boroughis typically between three and five points higher than the rest of the island.

Half the population is from a visible minority, and more than 40 per cent are immigrants.

'Completely predictable'

Montreal has now recorded more than20,000 cases and more than 2,100 deaths and with no immediate downturn in sight, the situation remains so grim that Premier Franois Legaulthas halted plans to reopen schools in the metropolitan region beforethe fall.

The first COVID-19 cases weretransmitted by travellers returning from the province's early March break, cellphone data has shown.

But two months later, the virus has spread quickly throughpoorer boroughs, including Montral-Nord, MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve and Ahuntsic-Cartierville, while early outbreaks in more affluent areas have been better contained.

For public health experts, the pattern was "completely predictable."

"Anyone who sees these health inequalities emerge is completely unsurprised," said Nicholas King, a professor at McGill University in Montreal who conducts research inpublic health ethics and policy.

Studies bearthis out, he said: People living in low-income neighbourhoods aremore susceptible to illness, for a number of reasons.

The neighbourhoodsaredensely populated, with more multigenerational families.

More residents work in jobs where they are likely to be exposed to illness stocking shelves or working the cash register in grocery stores, or at the bottom rung of the health-care sector, as orderlies and cleaners.

Public health datasuggests that's the scenarioin Montreal, where 19 per cent of confirmed cases have been among health care workers, many of them in the hardest-hit boroughs. Twenty-four per cent of the more than 1,800 COVID-19 cases in Montral-Nord have been health care workers, according to data compiled by the city's health department.

Dr. Nima Machouf, an epidemiologist and instructor in the school of public health at Universit de Montral, said the pattern is clear: The contagion ofMontreal's long-term care institutions, known as CHSLDs,has spread to the neighbourhoods where workers in those facilities live.

"The community transmission in low-income communities is a consequence of the spread in CHSLDs," she said.

At the plastics factory where Innocent worked the night shift, employees wore masks and were tested regularly.He seems to have caught it anyway, though how or where is not clear.

Michaud said she wanted to share her family's story because so many others in her neighbourhood are experiencing similar loss.

Her cousin a patient attendant working through a placement agency tested positive for COVID-19 last month. Her cousininfected her father-in-law, who livedwith her, and he died in early May.

'Working-class folks are the essential workers'

Tiffany Callender, executive director of the Cte-des-Neiges Black Community Association, said the municipal and provincial governments should have anticipated the problem sooner.

Like Montral-Nord,Cte-des-Neiges has a diverse population, with many residentsworking in low-paying essential service jobs. There, too, the number of cases of COVID-19 is on the rise.

"We have to consider how socioeconomics and employment and poverty play into COVID,"said Callender. "Working-class folks are the essential workers."

Tiffany Callender, executive director of of the Cte-des-Neiges Black Community Association, says COVID-19's spread in poor communities was predictable and governments should have done more sooner to prevent it.

A city bus that's been turned into a mobile coronavirus testing unit showed up inCte-des-Neiges earlier this week, and two mobile testing sites were parked in Montral-Nordon Thursday.

Callender welcomedthe city's commitment to increased testing, but she said it should be handing out masks and taking other measures to ensure people are able to practise physical distancing.

Like other civil rights advocates, she said Montreal needs to keep race-based and socioeconomic data, to better understand how the virus is spreading, as Toronto is doing.

Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante said Thursday the "issue of inequality" has been a focus of discussions with the premier.

"Thank you for your openness to put targeted measures for the most vulnerable neighbourhoods and populations," she said at a Montreal news briefing wherethey were both presentThursday.

WATCH | Montreal mayoron 2 key COVID-19 decisions made by the province

Montreal mayor on 2 key COVID-19 decisions made by Quebec

4 years ago
Duration 1:50
Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante welcomes financial help from the Quebec government to buy masks for the public and approves of the province's decision to delay opening Montreal schools.

Dancing and singing on Sundays

Michaud and Innocent worked opposite shifts she in the morning,he at night but on Sundaysthey were home together. She would dance as he sang along to Haitian evangelical music.

Marie Missoule Michaud says she wanted to share her story because she knows so many others in Montral-Nord have lost loved ones, as she has. (Submitted by Marie Missoule Michaud)

The pairmetand fell in love in the United States. Michaud was pregnant when theycrossedthe border into Canada in 2017 at Roxham Road,a well-trodden entry point for asylum-seekers coming from the U.S.

Michaud gave birth about five months later. She obtained refugee status, and the couple had been in the process of seekingpermanent residency for Innocent.

Nowshe's making funeral arrangements, with help from the company Innocentworked for.

Michaud says she's finding reasons to keep her faith.

When she got the news that she and her toddler had tested negative for the coronavirus, "I thanked God," she said.

She's thankful, too, for the help she's getting with groceries and suppliesfrom members of the community who are taking time to help grieving people like her.

"I'm in pain like everyone else," she says. "It's not just me."

With files from CBC's Alison Northcott

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