December 12, 2003
Chief medical officer orders pre-holiday flu preparations
Community gatherings
should continue, he says
JIM BELL
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
An Iqaluit resident
has fun at the Abe Okpik Hall last Friday. Nunavut's chief medical officer says
people who attend holiday festivities should wash their hands frequently and
stay home if they feel ill. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER LEWIS)
|
Nunavut's chief medical health officer, Dr. Jim Talbot, says Nunavummiut should
go ahead and attend traditional Christmas dances, feasts, games and church services
this year, as long as they wash their hands frequently and stay home if they
feel ill.
"It's our hope that we won't be asking anybody to postpone any of those
events because they are important to the community's health
spiritual,
psychological, mental and emotional - those are all components of healthy people
in healthy communities," Talbot said.
A new, hard-hitting flu virus, known as "Fujian A," struck early
this year, infecting scores of people in Sanikiluaq and Cambridge Bay before
it was brought under control.
In response, Talbot recommended that public gatherings and athletic events
planned for Cambridge Bay, Kugluktuk, Rankin Inlet and Chesterfield Inlet be
postponed until the New Year.
But he is not recommending that any community festivities across Nunavut be
postponed, for now, as long as people take normal precautions.
Talbot is, however, using his powers under the Public Health Act to ensure
that Nunavut's health department isn't caught off-guard by short-staffing over
the holiday period.
Last week, Talbot issued a directive giving himself and the deputy minister
of health and social services the power to cancel staff holidays if they have
to.
Under the directive, GN health-care providers and public health staff must
submit all leave requests to him or to the deputy minister for approval, until
after "this period of public health and safety risk from influenza has
passed." That includes all employee vacations that may have been previously
approved.
Talbot said this doesn't mean that all Christmas travel for Nunavut health-care
workers has been cancelled. He said it's simply to give them the ability to
cancel staff vacations if a flu outbreak in a community gets serious.
"Myself and the deputy minister will assess people's requests for leave,"
Talbot said. "We assume that the vast majority of leaves will go through,
but we need to have the option in case one of the situations becomes serious
to the health of a community.
Talbot's directive which overrides the collective agreement also
gives him the power to relocate any health care provider to another community
for a short period "to deliver additional control measures to respond to
and control the influenza outbreak in that community."
He said, however, that Nunavut's flu vaccination program this year may lessen
the impact of the Fujian A virus.
In some communities, Talbot said, as many as 75 per cent of residents have
received flu shots.
"That's just an amazing rate. It speaks very well of the community health
nurses, the community health representatives, and the communities themselves.
They're doing just a fabulous job."
This year's vaccine, however, does not contain Fujian A, and may not provide
complete protection against it, Talbot said.
That's because Fujian A is a new strain. However, the 2003 vaccine will likely
provide partial protection. So even if people who do get infected after a flu
shot, they will recover more quickly and suffer milder symptoms.
"Vaccination programs are important everywhere, but here they are even
more important, because they are the things that are responsible for reducing
the number of medevacs and the amount of serious illness," Talbot said.
And if strong public health measures need to be taken to deal with an outbreak,
Talbot said he prefers to take a co-operative approach, rather than to issue
orders under the Public Health Act.
"In the end, virtually everything we've done thus far, we've done in partnership
with the local authorities, and its been a joint decision, and it's been done
on a joint recommendation, and not on our order."
TOP
|