Quebec announces plan to deal with second wave of COVID-19, avoid fatal failures of the spring - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec announces plan to deal with second wave of COVID-19, avoid fatal failures of the spring

"We learned a lot of from the first wave," Health MinisterChristian Dubsaid Tuesday.

Plan includes more than $100M in additional funding for public health authorities

This summer, around 10,000 people have been going through an abbreviated training program to become a patient attendant in Quebec. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

The Quebec government is giving its beleaguered health-care system six weeks to fix the problems that caused the novel coronavirus to spread throughout the province this spring, killing nearly 6,000 people in its wake.

Health MinisterChristian Dubrevealed an ambitious series of reforms on Tuesday that he wants to see in place by Sept. 30. Theyrange from faster testing tonew staffing procedures, from better infection control to more accountable managers.

Dubalso announced$106 million in additional funding for regionalpublic health authorities to hire1,000 full-time employees to conduct contact tracing.

"We learned a lot of from the first wave," Dubsaid at a news conference in Quebec City. "We drew lessons from the things we did well, and not so well."

Quebecand Montreal in particularwas the epicentre of the COVID-19 outbreak in Canada between March and June. The province averaged nearly 1,000 new cases per day in early May and registeredhundreds of deaths every week.

The vast majority of the deaths were residents oflong-term care homes known in French as CHSLDs or private seniors'residences (RPAs).

It's believed the infections were often spread by staff who, at the outset of the pandemic, were forced to work at multiple locations because of severe personnel shortages.

'Consequences' for managers who ignore newrules

Hospitalizations and death have declined steadily since June, and government officials have spent the summer months trying to identify what exactly went wrong in the spring.

On Tuesday,Duband the minister responsible for seniors and informal caregivers,Marguerite Blais, blamed a host of pre-existing issues for the health-care system's inability to respond effectively to the crisis.

Both said long-standing staffing shortages in CHSLDswere a problem before their party, the Coalition Avenir Qubec, took power in 2018.

Health Minister Christian Dub outlined Tuesday a nine-point plan aimed at strengthening various points of the health-care system. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

Blais, who was seniors minister under the Liberals as well, said past budget cuts meant long-term homes were short on infection-control resources.

AndDubsaid past reforms by the Liberals leftCHSLDs without accountable managers.

A central element of hissecond-wave plan is bringing anend to the practice of patient attendants working in different long-term care homes or on different floors, in order to reduce cross-contamination.

"Let me be clear: there will be no mobility [of staff],"Dubsaid."Health-care managers who don't follow the rules will face consequences."

The province is in the process of rushing 10,000 new attendants through an abbreviated training program. Dubsaid that should be sufficient to solve the staffing shortage issue.

Another important element of the plan is to ensure each CHSLDin the province has an accountable manager, who will be responsible for overseeing infection control as well as staffing.

A funeral home worker removes a body in April from the CHSLD Sainte-Dorothe in Laval. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Other elements ofDub'ssecond-wave planinclude:

  • Procedures to ensure vulnerable populations, such as homeless people and at-risk youth, can still accesshealth and socialservices during a second-wave of infections.
  • Hospitalsbeing asked to avoid cancelling elective surgeries and other important medical procedures. Thousands of procedures were cancelled in the spring in order to free up hospital space that, in the end, wasn't needed.
  • Increasingstrategic reserves of medical supplies, including N95 masks and surgical gloves, and identifying local manufacturers for other medical equipment.

There will be a second wave

Though Quebec saw an increase in reported cases at the start of July as it lifted several lockdown measures, infection rates have dropped in recent weeks. The province is now averagingfewer than 100 new cases per day.

But with schoolsset to reopen at full capacity starting next week,and colder weather on the way, Dubsought to prepare Quebecers for what to expect in the fall.

"There will be a second wave. I'm saying that because I wouldn't want people to be disappointed when there are outbreaks in a hospital, a CHSLD or even in a school,"he said.

But this time, he added, "the health-care system will be able to respond more rapidly."

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