'Extraordinary' measures, provincial collaboration needed to fight COVID crisis: CMA

Canadian Press | April 16, 2021 in National News

Local Community Advertising

The Canadian Medical Association is calling for "extraordinary" measures, including sharing provincial health−care resources and dropping the per−capita approach to vaccine distribution, to address the COVID−19 crisis unfolding in several provinces.

The CMA says it wants the federal government to consider re−prioritizing its vaccine distribution strategy to focus on urgent areas instead of distributing to provinces on a per−capita basis.

The organization also says provinces should be sharing its health−care resources with areas that are especially hard−hit, including Ontario and Quebec where ICU capacity is overwhelmed.

Dr. Ann Collins, president of the CMA, says Canada is at a "critical juncture" of the pandemic, adding a "truly national approach" is needed to combat rising COVID activity in parts of the country.

The CMA says further restrictions "must also be considered" in provinces experiencing rapid rates of COVID−19 transmission.

Ontario was expected to announce new measures later Friday.

Local Community Advertising

Trending Stories

UPDATE: Missing 29-year-old woman found, BC RCMP say

Spring jolt for Kelowna real estate sales and prices

Special weather statement issued for BC Interior highways

Your Voice: Why hasn't BC looked at mobile home parks to solve the housing crisis?

BC man wants homes for thousands of books he soon won't be able to read

Police investigating trio of shootings in Kamloops

Tom Dyas: We need to come to terms with the fact that Kelowna can't solve homelessness alone

UPDATE: Girls, 13 and 14, charged with second-degree murder in Manitoba