Canadian Medical Association president says 'sick' health care system unprepared for a second pandemic wave - Action News
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Canadian Medical Association president says 'sick' health care system unprepared for a second pandemic wave

The president of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) says the country isn't prepared for a possible second wave of COVID-19 and ashortage of personal protective equipmentand poor testing numbers are leaving Canadiansvulnerable.

President of doctors' association says equipment shortages, poor testing numbers are alarming

An ambulance medic wears a mask to protect against COVID-19. (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP Photo)

The president of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) says the country isn't prepared for a possible second wave of COVID-19 and ashortage of personal protective equipmentand poor testing numbers are leaving Canadiansvulnerable.

"We're gambling by reopening," Dr. Sandy Buchman told the Senate's social affairs committee Wednesday.

"We need the contact tracing and serological testing in order to make decisions about what to do next ... We're scrambling.In my opinion, we're not fully prepared for a second wave."

Buchman issued a dire warning to senators, saying the country's health care system was"sick" before the pandemichit and the virus only made things much worse.

He said the system is "breaking down" because of personal protective equipment (PPE) shortages and physician fatigue and the consequences could be catastrophic if theCOVID-19 caseload surgesin the fall.

Watch:CMA president says provinces "are gambling with re-opening":

CMA president says provinces "are gambling with re-opening"

4 years ago
Duration 1:34
NB Conservative Sen. Rose-May Poirier and CMA President Sandy Buchman appeared at the Senate Social Affairs committee on Wednesday.

Buchman said there's an "urgent need" to strengthen the public health system's capacity to conduct more testing and contact tracing.

He said such measures are the only way to curb the caseload spike likely to follow as many provinces and territories start reopening their economies andrelaxing physicaldistancingmeasures.

He said the system as it is now has "insufficient information" about the extent of the virus's spread, since so many people are asymptomatic carriers.

Dr. Sandy Buchman (centre), president of the Canadian Medical Association, says Canada's health care is 'sick.' (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, said last month that Canada's labs have the capacity to test as many as 60,000 samples a day for the novel coronavirus but we're still nowhere near that level.

Ontario, for example, ran just 7,382 tests yesterday.

"We cannot consider ourselves civilized if we continue this way," Buchman said.

'Significant moral distress'

Buchman said physicians are experiencing a tremendous amount of "anxiety" because, three months into the pandemic, they still don't havea consistent, reliable, adequate supply of protective equipment for those workingon the frontlines of thiscrisis.

"We'd never permit a firefighter to go into a burning building without adequate protection. We can't expect our front line health care workers to put themselves in harm's way," he said.

He said some doctors and nurses are constantly on edge and warns that, without immediate intervention, we can expect"big problems" among health care providers during subsequent waves of the pandemic, such aswidespread depression and substance abuse.

"This is causing significant moral distress," he said.

He acknowledged that the federal government has been working hard to procure PPE for health care workers but said it has failed to be transparent about "what's in the pipeline."

He said many doctors are in the dark about PPE shipments and when they might have more masks on hand. He said masks are still being reused often, particularly in rural and remote settings.

Federal Public Services Minister Anita Anand told reporters Tuesday that the government has not taken its "foot off the gas pedal" when it comes to procuring the much-needed equipment.

Watch:Trudeau on prospect of tougher self-isolation measures:

Trudeau COVID-19 briefing Wednesday, May 20

4 years ago
Duration 34:17
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau held his daily COVID-19 briefing and took reporter questions outside Rideau Cottage on Wednesday, May 20.

"We have orders for hundreds of millions of further PPE and other medical supplies," she said, adding thatsome 500,000 N95 masks are coming from the manufacturer3M this month. She said shipments are arriving weeklyacross the Canada-U.S. border.

Made-in-Canada face shields, components for testing and ventilators are also starting to arrive, she said.

"I want to assure health care professionals that they can have confidence in the PPE coming out of federal warehouses to be distributed by provinces and territories," Anand said.

'The virus is still very much alive'

Buchman's concerns were echoed by Dr. Claire Betker, the president of Canadian Nurses Association, and Dr. Cornelia Wieman, the president of Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada.

Betker told the Senate committee that testing levels are especially worrying andCanada is falling behind other nations in the number of tests pumped through labs on any given day.

"We're concernedthat the virus is still very much alive, still spreading and not well understood," she said. "Given the lessons of history, we urge an evidence-informed and cautious re-opening."

Health Canada has been slow to approve serological testing devices;the first such device got the green light on May 12.

For weeks, Canada had no approved way to detect COVID-19 antibodies, which can help contribute to a better understanding of whether people who have been infected are immune to the virus. Access to such testing is limited, even as the Italian-madeLIAISON test comes online.

Other jurisdictions, notably the U.S., approved devices sooner, but many experts haveconcernsabout their effectiveness.

Watch:Prime Minister Justin Trudeau full press conference for May 20:

Trudeau on prospect of tougher self-isolation measures

4 years ago
Duration 1:02
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hints that Canada could bring in tougher self-isolation measures to slow the spread of the virus once the border finally reopens to non-essential travel.

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