:
I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number nine of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health. Today, we're meeting for two hours to hear from witnesses for our study of the emergency situation facing Canadians in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Before I introduce today’s witnesses, there are a few regular reminders for hybrid meetings.
Today’s meeting will be taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely, using the Zoom application. I think all the members are or will soon be in the room, and the only people on Zoom are the witnesses. I would like to take this opportunity to remind the people who are on Zoom that the taking of screenshots or photos of your screen is not permitted.
The proceedings will be made available on the House of Commons website.
All health protocols prescribed by the public health authorities and the directive of the Board of Internal Economy of October 19, 2021, will be observed and respected.
Before we get to our witnesses today, I'm informed that we have a couple of new members in the room. I would like to welcome Mr. Barrett, who replaces Mr. Berthold, and Ms. Goodridge, who replaces Ms. Kramp-Neuman. I appreciate the time and the work that the outgoing members have contributed to the committee, and I have every confidence that those shoes will be amply filled by their replacements.
However, Mr. Berthold's departure means that we are left with a vacancy in the first vice-chair role. Pursuant to Standing Order 106(2), the first vice-chair must be a member of the official opposition. I am now prepared to receive motions for the first vice-chair.
Go ahead, Mr. Lake.
:
It's been moved by Mr. Lake that Michael Barrett be elected as the first vice-chair of the committee. Are there any further motions?
Seeing none, is it the pleasure of the committee to adopt the motion?
(Motion agreed to)
The Chair: I declare Mr. Barrett duly elected first vice-chair of the committee. Congratulations, sir.
Now we'll move on to our witness and their opening remarks. To begin, both the Office of the Auditor General and the Public Health Agency of Canada have five minutes to make their opening statement before rounds of questions, which will occupy the remainder of our two hours.
With us today, we have from the Office of the Auditor General, Andrew Hayes, deputy Auditor General, and Jean Goulet, Carol McCalla and Chantal Richard, principals. From the Public Health Agency of Canada, we Brigitte Diogo, vice-president of the health security and regional operations branch; Cindy Evans, vice-president of the emergency management branch; and Christopher Allison, acting vice-president of corporate data and surveillance branch.
Thank you all for being with us here today. We're going to proceed in the order listed on the notice of meeting.
We're going to ask Deputy Auditor General Hayes to kick us off. You have the floor for five minutes.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for this opportunity to discuss our reports on the Public Health Agency of Canada’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. First, I would like to acknowledge that this hearing is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
Joining me today are Chantal Richard, Carol McCalla and Jean Goulet, who were the principals responsible for the three audits I will be discussing.
If I had to sum up our audits of pandemic preparedness, surveillance and response, I would say that, on the whole, the Public Health Agency of Canada was not as well prepared as it should have been to deal with this crisis. However, as we saw across the organizations tasked with pandemic response that we have audited to date, public servants rallied and adjusted their activities in real time.
In our March 2021 report that looked at the preparedness side, we found that not all emergency and response plans were up to date and tested at the onset of the pandemic. Data sharing agreements with the provinces and territories were also not finalized.
In addition, the agency relied on a risk assessment tool that was untested and not designed to consider pandemic risk. As a result, despite growing numbers of COVID-19 cases in Canada and worldwide, the agency continued to assess the pandemic risk as low. The global public health intelligence network did not issue an alert about the virus that would become known to cause COVID-19.
Once the pandemic hit Canada, the Public Health Agency of Canada and the Canada Border Services Agency worked together to implement border restrictions and quarantine requirements. However, we found that the Public Health Agency was unprepared for a nationwide quarantine. For example, it struggled with a paper system to gather travellers' information. This hindered efforts to follow up with individuals at risk of not complying with quarantine orders. As a result, the agency did not know whether 66% of incoming travellers who were required to quarantine in fact did so.
Our December 2021 report showed an improvement in the administration of the 14-day quarantine orders since our initial audit, partly because the agency had moved to an electronic system to collect travellers' information. However, between January and June 2021, the agency was still unable to confirm whether 37% of inbound travellers complied with quarantine orders. That is still a large number of people to lose sight of.
[Translation]
This second audit also looked at the enforcement of new testing orders. We found that the agency was either missing or unable to match 30% of COVID‑19 test results to travellers arriving in Canada. In addition, the agency lacked records for 75% of travellers arriving by plane, making it impossible to know whether these travellers quarantined at authorized hotels as ordered.
Our audit of personal protective equipment and medical devices released in May 2021 also showed that the Public Health Agency of Canada was not as prepared as it should have been to deal with the surge in requests for equipment from the provinces and territories triggered by the pandemic. This was because the agency had not addressed long-standing issues affecting the management of the National Emergency Strategic Stockpile, though these had been raised in audits and reviews going back more than a decade.
Despite these pre-existing issues, the agency worked with Public Services and Procurement Canada and Health Canada and adapted its activities to help meet needs for personal protective equipment and medical devices across the country. For example, the agency shifted to a bulk purchasing strategy and improved how it assessed needs and allocated equipment, among other changes.
If there is one overall takeaway from these audits, it is that long-standing known issues, such as outdated systems and practices, must be dealt with. This would allow government organizations to be better prepared for unforeseen events such as this pandemic.
This concludes my opening remarks. We would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.
Thank you.
My name is Brigitte Diogo and, as you mentioned, I'm the vice-president for the health security and regional operations branch. I am happy to be here today to have the opportunity to speak to the committee. I am joined by my two colleagues Cindy Evans, vice-president of the emergency management branch and Chris Allison, acting vice-president of the corporate data and surveillance branch.
As the pandemic approaches the two-year mark, we recognize the resilience of Canadians and the sacrifices everyone had to make in these unprecedented times to minimize the impacts of COVID-19. We are proud to say that the agency has worked throughout the pandemic to take the actions needed to protect the health and safety of Canadians.
[Translation]
The pandemic is not over and the agency must remain nimble and ready to respond to new risks in an appropriate and proportionate manner.
I would like to take a few minutes to talk about the Public Health Agency of Canada's efforts since the onset of the pandemic, in close collaboration with federal, provincial and territorial partners, as well as learning from the experiences of our international counterparts.
[English]
Over the past 24 months, the Public Health Agency of Canada has been on the front lines of the federal response to COVID-19. The agency has taken an evidence-based, multi-layered approach to public health measures, which have been adapted as we learned more about the virus and the delta and omicron variants that have emerged.
A year ago at this time, we were in the early stages of getting vaccines into the arms of Canadians. Thanks to a solid immunization strategy and federal, provincial and territorial governments working together, as of February 25, more than 80% of the total population is fully vaccinated. That is one of the highest rates in the world. Additionally, more than 55% of the population over 18 years of age have received an additional dose, and clinics are continuing to offer boosters.
[Translation]
With unvaccinated individuals who get COVID‑19 being 4 times more likely to be hospitalized than fully vaccinated individuals, it is clear that the vaccine roll-out helped to reduce severe illness and save lives.
Throughout the pandemic response, the Government of Canada has adjusted its border measures as new data, and scientific evidence became available, and in response to the epidemiological situation both in Canada and internationally.
[English]
The Government of Canada recognizes that border measures can pose challenges for individuals and families, but these measures help to prevent new chains of transmission in Canadian communities and protect Canada’s health care capacity and vulnerable populations. As the Auditor General noted, the agency was able to successfully adapt to secure personal protective equipment and medical supplies.
[Translation]
Throughout the pandemic, science and collaboration have been fundamental keys to inform the agency's efforts. We have gained much scientific knowledge about this novel virus and its variants to inform our advice and actions, and we have worked closely with other federal agencies, provinces and territories, Indigenous partners and academic and international counterparts on various, innovative research initiatives.
For example, the agency collaborated with other levels of government such as municipal governments, as well as academia, to establish a pan-Canadian network for wastewater surveillance to monitor for early-warning signals of COVID‑19 and its variants across the country.
[English]
In conclusion, collaboration, leadership, communication, science, surveillance and vaccination have been critical as we manage the pandemic. These same factors will continue to be key as we move forward. While significant strides were made over the course of the pandemic, the agency acknowledges that it was not as prepared as it could have been prior to the pandemic and that there are lessons to be learned.
We remain committed to responding to the Auditor General's recommendation in full within the established timelines. As the omicron wave continues to recede, we need to recognize that COVID-19 will be with us for the foreseeable future.
The Public Health Agency of Canada will continue to incorporate the knowledge and expertise it had gained towards our effort for the long-term sustainable management of COVID-19, and to better prepare for any future public health crisis.
My colleague and I will be happy to take your questions.
Thank you.
With respect to the global public health intelligence network, we thank the Auditor General for her attention to this important function.
A number of changes have taken place since the audit and since the independent expert panel. We've developed an action plan to address all of the recommendations. We have improved and streamlined the decision-making process for issuing GPHIN alerts and other GPHIN products and processes.
With respect to the technology, we have migrated the GPHIN system to a new cloud function, as well having moved forward to hire a technical adviser and investing in the training and development.
Those are a number of the changes that have been initiated since the time of the audit.
Thank you so much to all of the witnesses for joining us here today.
I'd also like to welcome our two new members, MPs Goodridge and Barrett. Welcome to HESA. I thank you for being here today.
I also want to thank you for all of your extraordinary work over the last two years. These last two years have been relentless, and all of our staff have been exhausted by them, and I imagine that you and your staff have been too, so I just want to acknowledge how challenging they've been and thank you for your extraordinary efforts.
I have two questions today, and both will focus on the Public Health Agency of Canada. Canada is fortunate to have one of the lowest death rates of all of our peer nation countries. While it's less productive to focus on how our system proved to be resilient and supported the health and safety of Canadians, I'm wondering why, from your perspectives, given that we have seen this pandemic unveil quite a few gaps in our health care system and some issues that we need to address as soon as possible....
It's also true that, from a performance perspective, Canada has demonstrated fairly good resilience against COVID-19. I suppose we all have our reasons to believe that to be the case, but I would like to hear from the Public Health Agency of Canada on why they believe our country has fortunately been among the countries with a lower death rate than many others.
I thank the witnesses for coming to enlighten us and give us an update on this pandemic so that we can find solutions and face the next pandemic by taking better measures.
My first question is for the Deputy Auditor General, Mr. Hayes.
Mr. Hayes, report number 13 clearly states that several shortcomings were identified with respect to the monitoring and verification of quarantine measures for temporary foreign workers. You mention incomplete or poor quality quarantine inspection, quality issues and delays in outbreak inspections, and a significant backlog of overdue inspections in the agricultural sector.
To what do you attribute these problems?
Don't you think it would have been more effective in terms of controlling the pandemic and the risk of outbreaks if the government had taken over the management of quarantines when the workers arrived, and then sent them on to their facilities or farms?
Wouldn't this have avoided the problems you raise?
:
You raised a problem with the management of on‑site inspections in each of the living environments.
Firstly, from your analysis, what are the problems due to?
I understand that your role is not to criticize the government's choices, but, according to your analysis, wouldn't it have been simpler to take charge of these workers immediately and then dispatch them to their workplaces, rather than deploy them and then conduct inspections at each of the living environments?
I will therefore put my question to the agency's representatives.
I assume you acknowledge the shortcomings raised in the Auditor General's report.
For the coming months and beyond, what lessons have you drawn?
To ensure adequate sanitary conditions while facilitating and simplifying processes for temporary foreign workers, inspectors and employers, what should be done?
:
Thank you for the question.
The current temporary foreign worker program is managed by Employment and Social Development Canada, or ESDC, but the agency has indeed worked closely with that department in the management of the program.
Decisions regarding the management of the quarantine of these workers were made in conjunction with the provinces and territories. Certainly, the best way to manage the risk of infection, even after foreign workers have entered Canada, is to ensure that they arrive at their quarantine location or destination.
We are indeed working with ESDC to make sure that we find ways to improve the processes when these workers arrive and to work with private sector partners to manage the risks and make sure that these workers leave healthy.
:
The Public Health Agency has increased its resources over the course of the pandemic. That's with respect to epidemiologists and physicians, as well as a number of laboratory technologists.
Certainly we are facing a pandemic that we haven't seen the nature of in a hundred years. While working with our colleagues in the jurisdictions, similarly, both the magnitude and length of the response created pressures on the types of resources we require.
We are pleased that the recommendations from the Office of the Auditor General are certainly moving forward in strengthening the Public Health Agency with respect to our organizational structure to bring clarity and attention to these areas as well in our training programs within the emergency management plans.
We've been quite fortunate with two programs, the Canadian field epidemiology program, which formed a key support during the COVID-19 response, as well as the Canadian public health service. Our ability to utilize those particularly epidemiological resources has certainly served us well, and we will be looking to bolster programs like those as well as others going forward.
Thank you.
The requested an independent review of Canada's global public health surveillance system, the global public health intelligence network, so I want to ask something about the GPHIN.
It seems that it was working at the time of COVID, and I think someone from PHAC told us that in fact there had been a warning that it had been detected and that there was an outbreak of pneumonias in China. However, the problem seems to be, from the report, that nobody was listening. If I can draw an analogy from medicine, there was a monitor on the patient, but nobody was looking at the monitor.
I'll quote from the report of the independent review. They said:
A governance structure was in place for oversight of surveillance activities from April 2017 to March 2019. However, key leadership responsibilities were not redistributed following the elimination of the...position.
Later on, they talk about the Centre for Emergency Preparedness and Response lacking information on how information on events is shared, particularly with senior management. Later on, they say it was not always clear who was responsible for what in the flow of information, risk assessment and chain of decision-making.
Again to use that analogy, there was information coming in. You did have a monitor on the patient, but nobody was watching the monitor.
In that independent review, they suggest more effective links between the global public health intelligence network and the Public Health Agency of Canada, the need for a whole-of-agency approach. What has the Public Health Agency of Canada done to address this shortcoming?
:
Mr. Chair, the external independent panel announced by the Minister of Health in November 2020 released its final report in July 2021. A number of the key findings are, as has been mentioned, that the GPHIN did what it was designed to do, and it also confirmed that it had never been shut down. The GPHIN did identify the outbreak in Wuhan and allowed PHAC leadership to take immediate action, so I would say the leadership was listening and did act immediately.
We notified officials across the government, followed by the public health officials across Canada by January 2. Therefore, very early on, the system was sensitized. Our response effectively began on the first days of 2020. The panel saw no evidence that any earlier identification by the GPHIN of the outbreak would have been possible, based on their assessment of other open-source data systems.
There were 64 recommendations from the independent panel on three different themes: GPHIN roles and purpose; the organization and flow of information; and technology. As has been stated, there were some broader recommendations, including looking at broadening our approach to risk assessment. In that regard, the agency has implemented, in December of the previous calendar year, a centre for integrated risk assessment so that we can move forward on those important recommendations.
I'll just pause and see if my colleague Mr. Allison would like to add anything with respect to the broader surveillance question you've raised.
:
Thank you, Cindy; and Mr. Chair, thank you for the question.
Not only is there, as Cindy mentioned, the Centre for Integrated Risk Assessment being stood up in December 2021, but also the development of a new branch, the corporate data and surveillance branch, which is responsible for working with partners, including the GHPIN network, and looking at things a bit more holistically, seeing how we can improve our overall surveillance, data integration processes and how we can get to the better public health outcomes that we're all looking for. CIRA, the Centre for Integrated Risk Assessment, is starting to look at these issues now and is developing the frameworks and processes that we need to move forward and do better, both through this pandemic that is ongoing and also into the future.
As I mentioned, GPHIN continues to be an important source of information, amounting to 20% of the feed-in to the World Health Organization's open-source data system.
We are very interested in the international discussions on updates and potential changes to the international health regulations, and Public Health Agency officials will be participating in those discussions and certainly are actively interested to follow those.
We agree with the independent review panel's recommendation that GPHIN should continue to include both domestic and international objectives with regard to providing that information.
The latest report from the Office of the Auditor General of Canada states that the agency did not have a record of stay for 75% of those arriving in Canada by air.
The agency therefore did not know whether people who were required to quarantine themselves in a government-approved hotel had done so. There were several failures to follow up on the quarantine of travellers.
Ms. Diogo, given these failures, are we to understand that the measures you thought you were taking to protect us were more like window dressing to reassure the public, not truly effective public health measures?
My next question is with respect to the requirement for proof of vaccination at our ports of entry. I want to refer to the “Statement on the 10th meeting of the International Health Regulations...Emergency Committee regarding the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic”, from January 19, 2022. That's from the World Health Organization. It lists and identifies actions that are critical for all countries. One item listed is that countries “NOT require proof of vaccination against COVID-19 for international travel as the only pathway or condition permitting international travel given limited global access and inequitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.”
It continues, but I'll stop quoting it there. I'll ask, through you, Chair, if the witnesses can tell us why that recommendation has not been adopted. Is Canada going to move away from the requirement for proof of vaccination as one of the other steps they're going to take towards sunsetting or ending the federal requirements?
:
Thank you, Cindy, and thank you, Mr. Chair.
Data gaps are a broad complex issue given the way that health is a shared responsibility across provinces, territories, indigenous communities and the federal government. As for solutions, there are no silver bullets. Work has been ongoing to find a way to make sure that public health data is reliable, timely and relevant, that data is getting to where it needs to be. This has been referenced in regard to the in both the Speech From the Throne and the mandate letter for the minister, where we're asked to continue demonstrating leadership in public health by strengthening surveillance and capacity in this space.
The pan-Canadian health data strategy is currently in development. We have an expert advisory group that has released two fantastic reports highlighting the complex work that needs to happen in terms of governance, interoperability, and in our systems and our partnerships in trust with citizens and stakeholders.
That is the high-level road map we are looking towards that's going to bring us forward. At the same time, there's a great deal of work on specific systems and looking at the IMIT capacity effect to make sure that we can work effectively with partners.
:
As I had mentioned, we worked with our federal colleagues to create a supply and demand model that looks at a number of factors in the information that's shared with us from the provinces and territories. We look at the epidemiology of COVID-19 and its progression, as well as ICU utilization. As well, we needed to account for where there may be changes in policies in the jurisdictions on usage and how they were distributing the masks. As an example, with omicron, where there was increased transmissibility, we did see an increase in the utilization of N95 masks. Certainly, that helped to inform changes to what we saw as the annual requirements. That would then change what we saw as our stockpile numbers and our eight-week supply based on the data from the height of omicron. When we looked at this in December 2021, it was in the order of 139 million as an annual figures for all of the country, so I'm looking at the eight-week supply and what would be required.
When we saw increased utilization of N95s by the provinces during omicron, while I said we had an 80:20 allocation framework, we did switch to immediately pushing out 100% of the masks coming in the door to the jurisdictions to help address that need. As well, where there were N95 equivalents for masks that were not the preference of the health care system because of the requirements for fit testing, we were able to work with the jurisdictions to have a broader distribution within their systems applied to the health care sector so that we could maximize the use of those other masks.
Those are some of the methods by which we could determine the overall amounts, and working with the transparent allocation framework and the ongoing weekly conversations with the jurisdictions at the Logistics Advisory Committee allow us to get the right amounts out to the right areas.
I want to thank everyone for appearing here today.
I will just second the comments made by my colleague, Mr. Davies, that the inability to answer some of these questions is truly outstanding. As someone who is brand new to this committee, many of the questions I've seen asked came from the brief that was prepared by the Library of Parliament, and you haven't been able to answer some very simple questions. I just want to make sure this is on the record.
To follow up on some of the questions that were asked by Mr. Barrett about whether you looked into the availability to have travel...not necessarily only have vaccinations, I'm just wondering if you could please provide an answer on that, Ms. Evans?
Thank you to the witnesses.
I'd like to start by asking PHAC this, specifically Mr. Allison. In the Office of the Auditor General's report number 8, the following was recommended:
The Public Health Agency of Canada should develop and implement a long-term, pan-Canadian health data strategy with the provinces and territories that will address both the long-standing and more recently identified shortcomings affecting its health surveillance activities.
The agency agreed to that recommendation, and I also believe that it created a corporate data and surveillance branch in October 2020. In the response from the agency—and I'm referring to page 48 of report number 8—it was indicated that “A long-term strategy is under development and is on track for completion by December 2021.”
Mr. Allison, are you in a position to be able to give us an update on where this strategy is? What are the short-term, medium-term and long-term objectives? Do you have a road map you can share with us, with some timelines?
Absolutely. The pan-Canadian health data strategy, which I did mention before, is the long-term road map that we're looking at. It's been developed in consultation with provinces and territories. Currently, two reports have been published by the expert advisory group. A third report is due in the spring of 2022.
With regard to the high-level milestones for the group, first, one of the key items was the creation of the corporate data and surveillance branch. The plan to establish the governance for the long-term pan-Canadian health data strategy has also been put in place. The launch of the expert advisory group has been put in place and, again, the development is set for April 2022.
The short- and medium-term priorities that have been outlined under the strategy are being defined by March 2022, and the intent is to bring this to a conference of deputy ministers of health in May 2022. The overall work is happening and is proceeding at pace. There are also task-limited time groups that are working on specific sub-items under the pan-Canadian health data strategy.
If the esteemed members of the committee have not read the first two reports, they are excellent and do highlight an ambitious but achievable path towards having an effective public health data ecosystem and effective sharing across provinces and territories.
:
Thank you, Mr. Allison.
I'll go back to you again, sir. The following recommendation is in paragraph 8.80:
The Public Health Agency of Canada should appropriately utilize its Global Public Health Intelligence Network monitoring capabilities to detect and provide early warning of potential public health threats and, in particular, clarify decision making for issuing alerts.
In the response, naturally the agency once again agreed, and said it “will work to make further improvement to GPHIN” and to one of the program components—the alert process, specifically, which continues.
Can you tell me why, specifically, the alert process, and what improvement has been done? Do we have any indication that we need to issue any potential alerts?
The external review panel did include, in its recommendations, that we should include early warning signals, currently known as alerts, which should remain a core function of GPHIN's operations. As I mentioned, that is one of several products that comes out of the GPHIN program.
What we have done since the audit was done, and since the review, is to improve and streamline our decision-making process for the GPHIN alerts and other GPHIN products and processes. In looking in detail at the report that came from the independent review panel.... They also suggested that we look at the terminology that we're using around the use of alerts, and work with international colleagues to make sure there's alignment in the nature of alerts and the degree to which an assessment forms part of those alerts.
We have undertaken some work to bring that clarity, but, in my view, it was also a nod from the external panel in terms of the importance of early warning in general, and events-based surveillance systems, and the role that they can play in pandemic preparedness.
Thank you.
The problem was that interpretation wasn't working.
The Office of the Auditor General of Canada's report identifies management problems with the National Emergency Strategic Stockpile. There were problems at the beginning of the pandemic. These problems, which were present in 2018, were already there in 2010, according to what was revealed.
What steps have you taken to address these issues affecting the stockpile and personal protective equipment?
I'm going to start with a caveat that's all too important these days to mention. I am pro-vaccination. I've been vaccinated, and have taken three shots of Pfizer. My family is all vaccinated, and I'm glad they are.
That said, like most people in this committee room, I know people who have chosen not to be vaccinated for whatever reason. It might be deep convictions. To use the words of the back in May of 2021 when he said, “we're not a country that makes vaccination mandatory”, I'm curious to know what advice was given between May of 2021 and three months later, when obviously there was a course reversal.
Did the Public Health Agency give advice on mandatory vaccines versus non-mandatory vaccination? Is there any evidence that the Public Health Agency presented that caused the Prime Minister to change his mind?
:
Okay, then I will take it back.
For members around the table, I will take a few seconds to give a quick plug for tomorrow's launch of the 44th Parliament's Parliamentary Health Research Caucus. Dr. Ellis is co-chair of that caucus. The theme is “Game Changers in Health Research and Health Innovation”. It's a virtual panel to be held at 4 p.m. I would highly recommend that you look at your email for the invitation and that you attend.
Next, I'd like to add my thanks to the witnesses. As someone who is in daily contact with either my CMOH counterparts around the country or with Public Health Agency officials, I know how hard you have all worked. I think the public may not recognize the role that provincial and territorial public officials and public servants play in providing that analysis, surveillance information, policy advice, procurement advice and many other roles that enabled us to get through this pandemic with relative success despite the hardships that Canadians have endured. I just wanted to add my thanks here.
One of my questions is about pandemic preparedness as a whole. When we look at, as an analogy, climate change disasters, we are looking at what were once 1 in 500-, 1 in 200- or 1 in 100-year events now becoming much more common. I fear the same may be true of pandemic-level events. I think these reports are very important to help us build capacity in vital areas of public health protection.
I have a question perhaps, through the Chair, for Ms. Evans.
When you look at pandemic preparedness as a whole, and given these reports, where do you think the highest priorities are?
:
Mr. Chair, in 2017, the Public Health Agency had to work with provinces and territories to create the FPT public health response plan for biological events. That would include things like pandemics.
We had started in 2019 working with the jurisdictions to put in place an exercise program so that we could get to a high degree of detail in terms of testing this program. We were fortunate to have a very robust initial planning conference in October 2019. However, unfortunately, COVID-19 arrived. At the request of the provinces and territories, we were delivering under that plan in real time, and so it was not the time to be doing exercises.
For us, a key priority will be learning the lessons from COVID-19 and looking at that plan as well as other capstone plans, our health portfolio emergency response plan and our strategic emergency management plan, to see where there are any gaps and where they need to be updated. Further, I would say that we are working in concert with our key partners across the federal government, including with Public Safety, the Canadian Armed Forces and Indigenous Services Canada.
We agree. We expect that in relation to climate change we're going to be seeing more natural disasters. We also need to keep our eye on the pandemic response, so it's incumbent on all of us to look to see what the upstream activities are that we could do, working with the jurisdictions, including municipalities as well as indigenous communities, to both prepare and to mitigate the impacts of emergencies, including pandemics.
:
Thank you. That's very helpful.
Following on the questions on GPHIN and signals and risk assessment, I have a question perhaps for Mr. Allison.
Especially in the early days of the pandemic, when the risk was really portrayed as low for quite a long time, what metrics were applied to risk assessment, and how do you think we can learn from assessing the risk of what turned out to be a highly-infectious and rapidly-evolving virus with wide geographic spread?
We certainly don't want to overcall risk, but we don't want to under-call it either. I'm really interested in your thinking as we move towards the CIRA, the Centre for Integrated Risk Assessment. What are your thoughts are on the metrics and how much we have learned?
:
We thank the Office of the Auditor General for flagging this important recommendation so early on in the pandemic. We did rapid point in time assessments from January to March 2020, which identified the impact of the virus as low. Our risk assessments were based on the WHO's rapid risk assessment guidance.
We looked to update. In June of 2020, that rapid risk assessment tool used was revised and updated. Similarly, improved tools were used to look at the variants of concern including, most recently, the omicron variant of concern. We will be working through our new Centre for Integrated Risk Assessment on the rapid risk assessment tools.
It's quite critical that we work with provinces and territories, as well as our international partners, to look for synergy across the methodologies that are used. However, we agree that there's work to be done.
Before I do this last round, let me recognize that the pandemic has been hard on everybody. I recognize how hard all of you are working and have been working for the last couple of years. You may not be able to answer some of the questions I ask, but I'm going to ask them anyway, because I think they're important to Canadians.
Allison, I think you're the chief data officer. Can you point to any data that you have found to back up the 's comments that of the people who choose not to be vaccinated, many are misogynists and racists? Is there any data to back that up?
:
With respect to the vaccination program, as I've stated, the officials who led the vaccine rollout are not here at the Standing Committee of Health today.
We'd be pleased to speak to the data with regard to the success of the vaccination effort, including, most recently, through the omicron aspect of the outbreak and the impacts on hospitalization and ICU utilization.
If there are specific questions, we'll be happy to do our best to answer those, but as I've stated, the officials who led our vaccine rollout program are not at the committee today.
I do want to remind every member of this committee that answers appear in the blues. If you're speaking while your question is being answered, it's not just rude; it's also inappropriate to suggest that they provide an answer in writing afterwards. If you're interested in the answer, just listen to the answer.
I also want to thank the witnesses for your patience today. I apologize that this meeting has gotten to the point that it has.
I have a question for my colleagues and not for the witnesses. If you'll indulge me, I'd ask for unanimous consent. I'm raising a motion:
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the Committee invites the Minister of Health, the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health, as well as officials, to appear for two (2) hours regarding the 2021-2022 Supplementary Estimates (C), the 2022-2023 Main Estimates, and the 2022-2023 Departmental Plans for the Department of Health, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and the Public Health Agency of Canada and that the meeting take place on Monday, March 21st, 2022.
[Translation]
M. Thériault, do you want me to read the motion in French?
:
I would start by saying that it is important to update and to ensure that the agreements between the federal government and the provinces about data sharing are effective.
Secondly, we need to ensure that there's an information system capable of collecting and storing all of the information from provinces that is required to be able to oversee and act in response to the pandemic is also important.
Finally, as we mentioned in our report, we need to test these systems and plans and agreements to make sure they operate effectively and, furthermore, that the resources needed are there, which is another important step.
:
We have been actively engaged with the provinces and territories, as well as indigenous and municipal governments.
During the COVID-19 federal response, we put in place a single window at the Public Health Agency [Technical difficulty—Editor] to reach out to us for the surge supports that would be available to them. We had over 150 operational calls with the jurisdictions to help them to get access to the resources available to them. That can include things like contact tracing supports and supplies from the national emergency strategic stockpile. As well, we were able to deploy epidemiologists. Just as an example, we were able to send epidemiologists to a James Bay area region that had several first nations communities, including Kashechewan, which saw over 10% of their population infected and several residents requiring hospital interventions.
The government also put in place a safe voluntary isolation sites program that allowed for over 60 isolation sites in 47 communities to be funded, which supported over 17,000 individuals. These are the types of activities that helped to [Technical difficulty—Editor] break transmissions.
One of the key learnings for this has been the ability to work with the jurisdictions, but also to put innovation and virtual supports in place. On the contact tracing, for example, we were able to support the programming with virtual call centre supports and similarly able to support other jurisdictions with remote epidemiological outbreak management.
There were quite a number of areas where we were able to work in concert with the jurisdictions. I think the gains that have been made in infection prevention and control programs as well have been another area where we've not only had an opportunity to step into an outbreak but also to help them lay a path forward in a number of areas to put key programming in place that would help mitigate further infections.
Obviously, my refusal was due to the form, and not the substance, of the motion. It may be presented Wednesday, and we will see at that time.
Ms. Evans, going back to the management of the National Emergency Strategic Stockpile, as part of the measures taken to replenish its supplies, do you favour local suppliers?
Excuse me, but if you are not able to answer that question, I will ask another.
To avoid the recurring problems with expired inventory, what have you put in place to apply proactive management? For instance, do you plan to renew or dispose of it through our health networks or charities, rather than waiting for it to be expired and throwing it away?
Could you at least answer that question?
:
Mr. Chair, the member has raised an important issue with respect to the life-cycle management of products through the national emergency strategic stockpile.
Certainly, our first line of deployment is to the provinces and territories for use within their health care systems, but where we see that stocks may expire before we're able to deploy them, we would follow the policies that are laid out by the Treasury Board in terms of appropriate divestment and deployment. We would, for example, look to transfer to other federal departments, usually through the Government of Canada surplus. We have an ability to sell them at fair market value.
As well, we look to do donations to other levels of government and recognize charitable organizations. That's another opportunity for a broader reach within Canada to make sure the supplies can be effectively used.
Conversion to waste, using the most environmentally sustainable method possible, is the choice that would be made following an attempt to look at all of the other avenues for effective use within Canada.
Ms. Diogo or Mr. Allison, in January, the WHO director general has noted the following:
No country can boost its way out of the pandemic.
And boosters cannot be seen as a ticket to go ahead with planned celebrations, without the need for other precautions.
Last month, the European Medicines Agency said that there was still no data supporting the need for a fourth COVID vaccine dose. It further stated that even if multiple boosters do prove to be necessary, they would need to be spaced out in the style of annual flu jabs, rather than delivered every several months. Finally, it warned that overly frequent booster doses could potentially lead to—quote—“problems with immune response”.
As Canadians near the end of the third booster program, what is the plan to deal with COVID-19 going forward?
Mr. Allison or Ms. Diogo, if you can't answer, that's fine. I'm not sure if it's beyond your scope.
Lastly, I'm confused because, unless I heard incorrectly, Ms. Evans stated that a warning was issued by GPHIN on December 30, 2019, yet the Auditor General's March 2021 report found that Canada's GPHIN failed to issue an alert to provide an early warning of the novel coronavirus.
I'm reading from a July 30 article in The Globe and Mail that said:
Canada's Auditor General is planning to investigate what went wrong with the country's once-vaunted early warning system for pandemics after the unit curtailed its surveillance work and ceased issuing alerts more than a year ago, raising questions about whether it failed when it was needed most.
They said that according to 10 years of documents obtained by The Globe and Mail, the system went silent on May 24, 2019, after issuing more than 1,500 alerts.
My question is for the deputy Auditor General. Did you find any alert issued by GPHIN in December 2019 about COVID-19?
:
Thank you, Ms. Evans, and thank you, Mr. Davies.
That concludes our questioning.
To all the witnesses, thank you so much for being here. Thank you for your patient professionalism. We understand that many of the questions that were posed probably should be posed to other officials within your department. We will endeavour to identify them and have them come back so that we can pose the same questions to them, but we absolutely appreciate the work that you do. We appreciate your being here and the professional and patient manner in which you have dealt with the questions.
Thank you so much for being with us.
We are ready for a motion for adjournment. Is it the will of the meeting that we do now adjourn?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: By consensus, the meeting is adjourned.