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New Brunswick

Unexplained high death counts in N.B. concerning, health minister acknowledges

In a noticeable change in tone Friday New Brunswick health minister Dorthoy Shephard told the Legislature she is concerned about unexplained high death counts in the province in the second half of 2021 and will attempt to get to the bottom of what happened.

886 people more than normal died during final 25 weeks of 2021

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard said a decision has been made by the Department of Health to do an excess deaths analysis once all registered deaths for 2021 have been coded with Statistics Canada. (CBC)

In a noticeable change in tone Friday, Health Minister Dorothy Shephard told the legislature she is concerned about unexplained high death counts in the province in the second half of 2021 and will attempt to get to the bottom of what happened.

"I think that everybody wants to know," said Shephard under questioning from interim Liberal Leader Roger Melanson.

Melanson was asking about an updated Statistics Canada report Thursday showing an estimated 4,599 people died in the province during the final 25 weeks of 2021, 886 more than long-term averages for that time of year after adjusting for population growth and aging.

This chart by Statistics Canada showing weekly death counts in New Brunswick over 8 years was issued this week. It depicts how much higher fatalities in New Brunswick rose during the second half of 2021 than normal. (Statistics Canada)

It is a death rate 23.9 per cent above normal, the highest rate of "excess mortality" among provinces over that period, ahead of other high rates posted by British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta.

"We all want to know what happened last fall," said Melanson.

Shephard agreed.

"It is a question that New Brunswickers need to have an answer to, Mr. Speaker, and I assure the interim leader of the Opposition that that is going to happen," she said.

COVID deaths

New Brunswick officially recorded just 114 deaths from COVID during the 25 week period under scrutiny.

Academics like the University of British Columbia's Kimberlyn McGrail and the University of Toronto's Tara Moriarty have raised the possibility that unusually high death counts in provinces that do not closely match their COVID death counts could mean fatalities caused by the virus were missed by health authorities.

On Thursday, Moriarty said a distinct spike in deaths in New Brunswick that occurred in the middle of a large COVID outbreak during the last five weeks of 2021 almost certainly suggests COVID deaths were occurring, but not being recorded.

Woman wearing white lab coat, smiling.
Tara Moriarty is an infectious disease expert and researcher at the University of Toronto. She says the fact that COVID-19 infections and unexplained deaths rose at the same time in New Brunswick in 2021 is a clue they are connected. (Lisa Xing/CBC)

"The overlap is almost perfect in time. So that's a really important clue that a lot of it is likely COVID related," said Moriarty.

"The level of excess mortality in New Brunswick during that period is enormous. And if it's not COVID killing people, what the hell is it?"

Shephard said Friday she considered that "fear mongering" by Moriarty.But did accept Moriartyand Melanson's position that answers to what killed so many in 2021 are required.

"I agree with the Leader of the Opposition, Mr. Speaker, and a decision has been made by the Department of Health that they will complete an excess deaths analysis once all registered deaths for 2021 have been coded with Statistics Canada," said Shephard.

Premier concerned

Premier Blaine Higgs said he too found the elevated number of deaths "obviously most concerning," and pledged the issue will be thoroughly scrutinized.

Interim New Brunswick Liberal Leader Roger Melanson won agreement from Health Minister Dorothy Shephard and Premier Blaine Higgs that unexplained high death counts in New Brunswick in 2021 are a concern. (Jacques Poitras/CBC file photo)

"If there's more investigation requirements, there's more information required. We will proceed to get everything we can," said Higgs.

It was a distinct change from when Melanson asked about the same issue in the legislature in May and then again last week. At the time he was accused by Shephard of making "an insinuation" of wrongdoing by governmentby asking about excess deaths.

"The member is alluding to something being wrong," said Shephard during Question Period on June 1.

New Brunswick experienced 886 more deaths than normal during the final 25 weeks of 2021. Many came during COVID-19 outbreaks but were not classified as COVID deaths. The province is promising to find out why. (Kiichiro Sato/Associated Press)

"He needs to come clean, Mr. Speaker. I do not understand where he is going with this."

Statistics Canada has been tracking deaths in each province monthly during the COVID-19 pandemic and comparing them to what would have been expected in a normal year in an effort to detect "excess mortality" caused by the virus both directly and indirectly.