TORONTO — Ontario is facing growing calls to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations for non-essential activities and health-care workers as infections rise, but the government is urging people to focus less on daily case counts and more on hospitalizations.
Health Minister Christine Elliott held the line Tuesday on her government’s staunch opposition to both requiring health-care workers be vaccinated and requiring a vaccine certification system for places such as bars and gyms, as seen in some other jurisdictions.
“There’s a mixture of views on that particular subject and we are not mandating vaccines for anyone, although we strongly encourage people to take the vaccine,” she said after an announcement in Collingwood, Ont.
The Ontario Long-Term Care Association has now joined the Ontario Medical Association, the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, the Ontario Pharmacists Association and others in calling for mandatory vaccines for health-care workers.
The province requires staff in long-term care homes to disclose their COVID-19 vaccination status, and those who are unvaccinated for non-medical reasons have to undergo education about the importance of immunization.
Premier Doug Ford has spoken in support of a Toronto hospital network’s policy that unvaccinated staff — and those who won’t disclose their vaccination status — have to take a COVID-19 test before coming to work.
Business groups such as the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, the Toronto Region Board of Trade, and doctors’, nurses’ and pharmacists’ groups have called for a vaccine certificate system as a way to avoid a fourth-wave lockdown.
Ford has said he doesn’t want to create a “split society,” and Elliott said Tuesday that requiring proof of vaccination is up to individual businesses.
Ontario reported 321 new COVID-19 cases Tuesday – the fifth day in a row of more than 300 cases – and two new deaths. It comes as the Health Ministry rearranged its daily reporting website to emphasize hospitalizations over daily cases.
The numbers of new cases, hospitalizations and ICU admissions vary widely in different areas of the government’s data. The ministry said it’s due to different data collection and reporting processes. But in general, it shows that roughly 80 per cent of the cases, hospitalizations and ICU admissions are in unvaccinated and partially vaccinated people.
The new framing comes in conjunction with a newspaper op-ed from the chief medical officer of health, who wrote that growing case counts won’t have the same meaning now as during previous waves, due to high rates of vaccinations.
Dr. Kieran Moore said breakthrough infections in fully vaccinated people tend to be milder.
More than 81 per cent of eligible Ontarians have received at least one dose and nearly 72 per cent are fully vaccinated.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 10, 2021.
Allison Jones, The Canadian Press
- November 24, 2024 Issue - November 25, 2024
- November 10, 2024 Issue - November 9, 2024
- October 24, 2024 Issue - October 30, 2024