Sask. needs to proceed cautiously into 2022 with Omicron on the rise: Dr. Shahab - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. needs to proceed cautiously into 2022 with Omicron on the rise: Dr. Shahab

Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer reflected on the second year of a global pandemic during a wide-ranging interview.

Chief medical health officer urges everyone get booster doses, use rapid tests over the holidays

Premier Scott Moe and Dr. Saqib Shahab, Saskatchenwan's chief medical health officer, speak at a COVID-19 briefing. (CBC)

Saskatchewan's top doctor says that the provinceneeds to be cautious asthe holiday season approaches.

In a year-end interview,Dr. Saqib Shahabsaid the number ofCOVID-19 cases caused by the Omicron coronavirus variant in Saskatchewan may be low right now, but that could change rapidly.

The chief medical health officer pointed to the rapidly evolving situations in other provinces across Canada.

With many questions lingering around the newest virus variant, herecommended everyone getfully vaccinated, and get a booster dose once they're able to.

"We should all think how lucky we are to be in Saskatchewan and in Canada, to be able to actually offer boosters now with a three month interval," ShahabtoldCBC'sSam Maciag.

"We need to take advantage of this opportunity and get boosted as quickly as we can."'

While this holiday season is different from the last,that it doesn't mean anyone should throw caution to the wind, he said.

At the end of 2020, Saskatchewan was experiencing a record spread of COVID-19.

In response, officials implemented restrictions on gatherings, allowing only members of a single household to gather in homesover theChristmas holidays.

WATCH|In conversation with Dr. Saqib Shahab as he reflects on 2021:

In conversation with Dr. Saqib Shahab as he reflects on 2021

3 years ago
Duration 13:05
A look back at the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic with chief medical health officer Dr. Saqib Shahab

The decision was necessary at that point, but it doesn't need to be repeated this year, said Shahab.

He pointed to the high rates of vaccination,the relatively low number of cases in the province right now and the general abundance of rapid testing kits.

"I would really recommend every time we go into a gathering,everyone should test themselves. Ifyou know you're asymptomatic or test negative, that's a great reason to feel reassured," Shahab said.

A personal cost

While 2021 is nearing its end,the effects of the year's events will be long lasting.

The province recorded the deadliest single monthof the pandemic in October, during the depths of a Delta-fuelled fourth wave, and27 intensive care patients had to be airlifted to Ontario for treatment.

A patient from Saskatchewan is transferred from an air ambulance to a waiting Peel Region ambulance at Pearson airport in Toronto
A patient from Saskatchewan is transferred from an air ambulance to a waiting Peel Region ambulance at Pearson airport in Toronto on Oct. 27. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

As one of the faces of the province's COVID-19 response, Shahab said theyear's events have weighed heavily on him.

Like COVID-19, the emotional toll has come in waves, he said.

Protesters have appeared outside of his home. In another incident that drew national attention,he became emotional when publicly calling for people to get vaccinated.

WATCH|Saskatchewan's chief medicalmakes emotional plea:

Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer became emotional during a COVID-19 media briefing

3 years ago
Duration 3:11
Dr. Saqib Shahab pleads with the public over troubling new COVID-19 modelling in Saskatchewan

Despite the hardship, Shahablaughed when asked if he's ever thought about walking away and quitting during this year.

"It's not just me. [It's]everyone who works in public health," he said.

He referred to the efforts of those he works alongside, like the epidemiologists who get up at 3 a.m. every day to process data and make sure it is available for the public.

Many doctors and experts have stepped into the public eye, he said, fulfilling a role that they likely never thought they would do.

"Most of us have stepped forward, not stepped back. But we also have to recognize it has taken a toll and it has taken a toll on all of us," said Shahab.

The province's top doctor also praised Scott Livingstone, the now-former CEO of the Saskatchewan Health Authority.

He called Livingstone "atremendous colleague throughout the pandemic," and said whilehe doesn't know the reason for the CEO'ssudden resignation, he notedmany have had plans interrupted by COVID-19.

That's the cost of being a public figure during a pandemic, said Shahab.

The top doctor also commended the people ofSaskatchewan for how they have handled the pandemic and recommended that everyone support one another.

"[It's] time to think about your friends and family who may not have those connections and reach out.

"I think that's what people in Saskatchewan do really well, and that is, I think,something we should do this year as well."

With files from Sam Maciag