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Is the official Omicron paranoia overblown? Frustration, fatigue overtake fear of 'doomsday' warnings – National Post

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‘They are making statistically correct assumptions by not panicking when a new variant causes more infections, but no spike in severe illness and death’

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Omicron will likely usher in the worst wave of the pandemic yet, some scientists are warning. But have people grown frustrated, tired and even bored with the “doomsday” messaging?

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The speed at which Omicron is spreading and the variant’s intimidating attack rate means people will need to cut their personal contacts by at least 50 per cent in order to buy time for more booster vaccines and “blunt” — and only blunt, and not “flatten” — the coming wave, Dr. Adalsteinn Brown, head of Ontario’s COVID-19 science advisory table, said Thursday.

“I believe we can do this without closing schools or shutting down businesses that have suffered during previous waves,” Brown said. “But it will take serious restrictions that reduce contacts.”

The grim modelling predicting up to 10,000 daily cases in Ontario by the end of December without a “circuit breaker” was presented just one day after the federal government advised against non-essential international travel. In Atlantic Canada, restrictions are being tightened and school breaks extended, while in British Columbia, the province’s health minister is encouraging residents to think hard about even domestic travel.

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The Omicron story is fluid and fast-moving: France on Thursday shut out tourists from the United Kingdom, where COVID is flourishing, and Brown shared graphs showing the variant’s spread in several other European countries. Omicron is “still able to find people and have serious consequences,” he said. “It’s not just a case of the sniffles.”

But while cases in South Africa have rapidly taken off, and hospitalizations are trending up, the rise in deaths is less steep than in previous waves. Early data released this week suggest that while Omicron is able to escape some past immunity from vaccines and prior infections, hospital admissions among infected adults are 29 per cent lower than what they were in South Africa’s first COVID wave, fewer people are requiring oxygen therapy and hospital stays are shorter.

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  1. Test tubes labelled

    NP view: No time for an Omicron lockdown

  2. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has said recently that Alberta's strict public-health measures were increasingly out of step with how Albertans were behaving.

    Canadians hitting ‘outer limits’ of what public-health restrictions they’ll accept, Kenney says

  3. Last week, the government implemented several new travel related measures including a requirement for all incoming travellers, except those coming from the U.S., to face a COVID test, regardless of their vaccination status.

    Federal government warns against non-essential travel in response to Omicron

While acknowledging that “uncertainty persists,” Brown said that, even if Omicron were 29 per cent less severe, the decrease would have to be much greater to make up for the variant’s hyper-contagiousness in order to avoid straining intensive care capacity. Omicron’s reproductive number — the number of people each infected person goes on to infect — is 4.55, the highest yet seen, Brown said.

No one is saying let Omicron run rampant. Canada this week surpassed 30,000 COVID-related deaths. Healthcare workers are exhausted or burned out from earlier surges. “But many people aren’t so afraid of COVID-19 anymore, complicating public health authorities’ efforts to slow Omicron’s spread,” Adam Grant, an organizational psychologist wrote this week in The New York Times.

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“We’ve all seen this horror movie before, and when you’ve watched the killer jump out brandishing a weapon 10 times — even when you’ve watched him kill — it just doesn’t freak you out the same way,” Grant wrote. “The same rerun has been playing for 21 months. We’re living through a phenomenon that risk experts might call a boring apocalypse.“

When COVID first revealed itself to the world, “no doubt its novelty was part of what made it scary,” Derek Koehler, a professor of psychology at the University of Waterloo said in an email. “The idea of a global pandemic sounded like something from a horror film.” While he wonders how much people have really become desensitized to SARS-CoV-2, “we’ve lived through it, or at least part of it, so it makes sense that some of that fear has been replaced by fatigue, frustration or even boredom.”

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The rolling waves, the ever-changing guidance on what’s allowed, discouraged and then allowed again, has had people living in a state of constant flux, Koehler said, and the human brain loathes uncertainty.

“If we do see a decrease in compliance with public health guidance in response to Omicron, it could be because people feel less fearful about COVID than they did a year ago. But fatigue, frustration and a sense that the pandemic will never end might be larger contributors.”

Our species … thrived in the wake of actual catastrophes that were much, much worse than COVID

But individually, and as a society, “we might also think about the price we have already paid” in battling COVID, Koehler said. “Letting down our guard now might feel as if it undoes those earlier sacrifices.”

The problem isn’t so much that people have become too relaxed, said McGill University anthropologist Samuel Veissière. “This is a normal coping response to the ‘new normal’ of the pandemic,” he said. Rather, “media and government continue to relay catastrophizing messages that are out of touch with actual threat levels.”

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“Our species evolved to be adaptable and resilient in the face of danger, and thrived in the wake of actual catastrophes that were much, much worse than COVID,” said Veissière, assistant professor of psychiatry and co-director of the Culture, Mind and Brain program at McGill.

The vast majority of Canadians continue to show trust and cooperation, he said. “They got vaccinated, wear masks, get tested when it is required, and are lining up for booster shots.

“They see evidence in their everyday life that these measures have worked, and they are making statistically correct assumptions by not panicking when a new variant causes more infections, but no spike in severe illness and death.”

Despite “doomsday” scenarios, “that comparatively few people are panicking.…. Is once again a testament to our species’ remarkably resilient nature,” Veissière said.

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There’s a whole biology around stress, and the worst type of stress is chronic, unpredictable stress, said Dr. Roger McIntrye, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at the University of Toronto.

When animals are subjected to acute stress, “they manage fine,” McIntyre said. They largely adapt to chronic stress, too. “But when they’re subjected to chronic, unpredictable stress — they never know when the event is going to end — they end up with heart disease, obesity, diabetes, brain damage and premature mortality.”

People line up at a Toronto mall where 1,000 COVID-19 antigen rapid test packs were handed out for free due to concern over the spread of the Omicron variant, December 16, 2021.
People line up at a Toronto mall where 1,000 COVID-19 antigen rapid test packs were handed out for free due to concern over the spread of the Omicron variant, December 16, 2021. Photo by Jack Boland/Postmedia

The pandemic began with the suggestion that it would take just two weeks of restrictions to “flatten” COVID’s spread. “We’re now starting year three of this. You can’t make this up, this is a sick, sick situation,” McIntrye said. “The notion that people should just be told to stay home, I would have thought we would have learned a bit more by now. There are hazards to that.” The World Health Organization defines health as physical, but also mental and social wellbeing. “We need to protect all of those,” McIntrye said.

“I think people are fed up, I think people have had enough.” You can see and hear the exhaustion everywhere, he said.

“The last thing we want anybody to do is to throw the baby out with the bath water, and just say, ‘The heck with everything’ and do what they want. That’s not what anyone wants,” McIntrye said.

“But it’s looking increasingly to me that we’re going to have COVID forever. The question is, how are we going to identify a life living with COVID? What’s that going to look like? And that’s going to take some pretty brave leadership.”

• Email: skirkey@postmedia.com | Twitter:

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Bird flu raises concern of WHO – ecns

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The World Health Organization (WHO) said the rising number of bird flu cases has raised “great concern” because it had an “extremely high” mortality rate among those who had been infected around the world.

The WHO’s data show that from 2003 through March 2024, a total of 889 worldwide human cases of H5N1 infection had been recorded in 23 countries, resulting in 463 deaths and a 52 percent mortality rate. The majority of deaths occurred in Southeast Asian countries and Egypt.

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The most recent death was in Vietnam in late March, when a 21-year-old male without underlying conditions died of the infection after bird hunting. So far, cases in Europe and the United States have been mild.

Jeremy Farrar, chief scientist at the WHO, said recently that H5N1, predominantly started in poultry and ducks, “has spread effectively over the course of the last one or two years to become a global zoonotic — animal — pandemic”.

He said that the great concern is that the virus is increasingly infecting mammals and then develops the ability to infect humans. It would become critical if the virus develops the ability to “go from human-to-human transmission”, Farrar said.

In the past month, health officials have detected H5N1 in cows and goats from 29 dairy herds across eight states in the US, saying it is an alarming development because those livestock weren’t considered susceptible to H5N1.

The development worries health experts and officials because humans regularly come into contact with livestock on farms. In the US, there are only two recorded cases of human infection — one in 2022 and one in April this year in Texas. Both infected individuals worked in close proximity to livestock, but their symptoms were mild.

Wenqing Zhang, head of the WHO’s global influenza program, told the Daily Mail that “bird-to-cow, cow-to-cow and cow-to-bird transmission have also been registered during these current outbreaks, which suggest that the virus may have found other routes of transition than we previously understood”.

Zhang said that multiple herds of cow infections in the US states meant “a further step of the virus spillover to mammals”.

The virus has been found in raw milk, but the Texas Health Services department has said the cattle infections don’t present a concern for the commercial milk supply, as dairies are required to destroy milk from sick cows. In addition, pasteurization also kills the virus.

Darin Detwiler, a former food safety adviser to the Food and Drug Administration and the US Agriculture Department, said that Americans should avoid rare meat and runny eggs while the outbreak in cattle is going on to avoid the possibility of infection from those foods.

Nevertheless, both the WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said that the risk the virus poses to the public is still low. Currently no human-to-human infection has been detected.

On the potential HN51 public health risk, Farrar cautioned that vaccine development was not “where we need to be”.

According to a report by Barron’s, under the current plan by the US Health and Human Services Department, if there is an H5N1 pandemic, the government would be able to supply a few hundred thousand doses within weeks, then 135 million within about four months.

People would need two doses of the shot to be fully protected. That means the US government would be able to inoculate about 68 million people — 20 percent — of 330 million in case of an outbreak.

The situation is being closely watched by scientists and health officials. Some experts said that a high mortality rate might not necessarily hold true in the event the virus became contagious among people.

“We may not see the level of mortality that we’re really concerned about,” Seema Lakdawala, a virologist at Emory University, told The New York Times. “Preexisting immunity to seasonal flu strains will provide some protection from severe disease.”

Agencies contributed to this story.


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Peel Region has major childhood vaccination backlog – CBC.ca

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Peel Region has a massive childhood vaccination backlog, with more than half of children missing at least one mandated vaccine dose.

That’s the warning from Peel’s acting medical officer of health, who says the lack of school immunizations is spelling trouble for communicable diseases.

“Without significant dedicated resources, we estimate it will take seven years to complete screening catch up and achieve pre-pandemic coverage rates,” said Dr. Katherine Bingham in a presentation to Peel council on April 11.

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She says low immunization coverage among students significantly increases the risk for the re-emergence of vaccine-preventable diseases such as measles.

Unless children have a valid exception, the following vaccines are mandatory for Ontario school children: diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, meningitis, whooping cough and chicken pox. Several other vaccines are strongly recommended by public health units and doctors. 

Advocates, doctors and Peel public health are advocating for more attention to the issue, more money from the province for public health and the formation of an action plan to quickly address the currently low vaccination rates.

Peel stacks lower than the provincial average on a number of vaccinations. For example, just over 37 per cent of seven-year-olds had been vaccinated against measles compared to more than 52 per cent province-wide as of August 31, 2022.

Peel Public Health says many children missed vaccinations they would have received at school or a doctor’s offices. Reporting of vaccines and enforcement also fell behind in the pandemic. To tackle the backlog more quickly, Peel Public Health opened public clinics for mandatory vaccines as of April 1 of this year.

‘We never thought it would be us’: mother

Jill Promoli, a Mississauga mother, lost her son, Jude, to a school flu outbreak eight years ago even though he was vaccinated. She’s now an illness prevention advocate championing immunizations and said the low vaccination rates in Peel children are “very concerning.”

“We never thought it would be us, but it is going to be someone,” said Promoli, who’s also a Peel District School Board Trustee, but did not speak to CBC Toronto in that capacity.

“The reason that we do vaccinate against these diseases is not because they’re inconvenient or uncomfortable, but it’s because people do die from them,” she said.

Jill Promoli, second from right, a Mississauga mother, says 50 per cent of Peel children missing a mandatory vaccine dose right now is “very concerning”. The Promoli family had this portrait taken before Jude, right, passed away eight years ago due to a school flu outbreak. (Submitted by Jill Promoli)

Promoli says she’s also concerned about children who are vaccinated being exposed, given vaccines do not provide complete immunity.

Pediatric and infectious disease specialist, Dr. Anna Banerji, called the proportion of Peel students missing a mandated dose “very high.”

“It needs to be addressed,” she said.

She says part of the problem in the region is access, including to family doctors, but the region also has a diverse population, which can mean additional challenges.

“I think that language and cultural support and trying to get these kids vaccinated will be very important,” she said.

Banerji also pointed to vaccine hesitancy being higher for some coming out of the pandemic.

She says seven years is far too long to have school-aged children not protected against such concerning diseases.

Needs will only grow, says Caledon mayor

The public health unit says they have less money than several nearby health units to try and tackle the issue, receiving one of the lowest provincial per capita funding rates in the province. 

For cost-shared programs, in Peel, public health was funded by the province at approximately $34 per capita in 2022, while Toronto and Hamilton each received $49 per capita, according to the health authority’s report. 

Caledon Mayor Annette Groves says the funding needs to change now to address problems that will continue to climb for Peel Public Health.

“Peel is a growing region and there will be greater need for funding as our resident population increases,” she said in a statement.

Caledon Mayor Groves at Queen's Park.
Caledon Mayor Annette Groves says Peel needs to receive more money from the province to handle public health in a growing population. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Province says funding has been increasing

Asked why Peel Public Health gets fewer dollars per capita, Ministry of Health spokesperson Hannah Jensen didn’t dispute Toronto and Hamilton received more funding per capita.

“Since 2018, our government has increased our investment into Peel Public Health by nearly 20 per cent,” she said in a statement.

Jensen said that’s in addition to the $100 million the provincial government invested into public health units across the province to provide support throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

The government has restored a funding model where the province pays 75 percent of cost sharing for public health units and municipalities including Peel pay 25 percent, she said, noting the province had been paying 70 per cent for some time, so this represented an increase.

The province also increased base funding by one per cent per year, over the next three years, starting this year for public health units and municipalities including Peel, she added. 

Asked why Peel would still receive a lower per capita rate that some of its neighbours, the province did not respond directly. 

She says the government is working closely with its partners to get children caught up on vaccines.

Teenage girl gets a vaccination from a Toronto Public Health nurse at a school immunization clinic.
A spokesperson for the Ministry of Health says since 2018, the provincial government has increased investment into Peel Public Health by nearly 20 per cent. Peel Public Health says it receives significantly less from the province per capita than nearby Toronto or Hamilton and is advocating for more money. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Promoli says the per capita discrepancy in funding between regions is “shocking” and diverse populations need more, not less.

“It’s always important to try to meet people where they are,” she said. “To hear those questions, to hear the reasons why people are hesitant or even refusing and to try to understand…and then find the best ways to help people make decisions that will best protect their families.”

Peel Public Health says it plans to return to council soon with more details about the challenges and its plans to address them.

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It's possible to rely on plant proteins without sacrificing training gains, new studies say – The Globe and Mail

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At the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, a scientist named Paul Schenk surveyed the eating habits of top athletes from around the world. The Canadians reported plowing through more than 800 grams of meat per day on average; the Americans were downing more than two litres of milk daily.

While there have been plenty of changes in sports nutrition since then, the belief that meat and dairy are the best fuel for building muscle persists. These days, though, a growing number of athletes are interested in reducing or eliminating their reliance on animal proteins, for environmental, ethical or health reasons. A pair of new studies bolsters the case that it’s possible to rely on plant proteins without sacrificing training gains, as long as you pick your proteins carefully.

The standard objection to plant proteins is that they don’t have the right mix of essential amino acids needed to assemble new muscle fibres. Unlike animal proteins, most plant proteins are missing or low in at least one essential amino acid.

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In particular, there’s one specific amino acid, leucine, that seems to play a special role in triggering the synthesis of new muscle. It’s particularly abundant in whey, one of the two proteins (along with casein) found in milk. That’s why whey protein is the powdered beverage of choice in gyms around the world, backed by decades of convincing research, which was often funded by the dairy industry.

But one of the reasons whey looks so good may be that we haven’t fully explored the alternatives. A 2018 study by Luc van Loon of the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands, for example, tested nine vegetable proteins including wheat, hemp, soy, brown rice, pea and corn. To their surprise, they found that corn protein contains 13.5 per cent leucine – even more than whey.

Based on that insight, van Loon decided to pit corn against milk in a direct test of muscle protein synthesis. Volunteers consumed 30 grams of one of the proteins; a series of blood tests and muscle biopsies were collected over the next five hours to determine how much of the ingested protein was being turned into new muscle fibres. The results, which appeared in the journal Amino Acids, were straightforward: Despite all the hype about whey, there was no discernible difference between them.

A second study, this one published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise by a team led by Benjamin Wall of the University of Exeter in Britain, had similar findings. Instead of corn, it used a mix of 40 per cent pea, 40 per cent brown rice and 20 per cent canola proteins. Since different plants have different amino acids profiles, mixing complementary proteins has long been suggested as a way overcoming the deficiencies of any single plant protein. Sure enough, the protein blend triggered just as much new muscle synthesis as whey.

On the surface, the message from these studies is straightforward: Plant proteins are – or at least can be – as effective as even the best animal proteins for supporting muscle growth. There are a few caveats to consider, though. One is that the studies used isolated protein powders rather than whole foods. You would need nearly nine cobs of corn to get the 30 grams of protein used in van Loon’s study, compared to just three-and-a-half cups of milk.

Another is that plants are generally harder to digest, meaning that not all the amino acids will be usable. That may not be a problem for healthy young adults consuming 30 grams of protein at once, which is enough to trigger a near-maximal muscle response. But for older people, who tend to have blunted muscle-building responses to protein, or in situations where you’re getting a smaller dose of protein, the details of protein quality may become more important.

Of course, the effectiveness of plant proteins won’t be news to notable plant-based athletes such as ultrarunner Scott Jurek or basketball star Chris Paul – but it’s encouraging to see the science finally begin to catch up.

Alex Hutchinson is the author of Endure: Mind, Body, and the Curiously Elastic Limits of Human Performance. Follow him on Threads @sweat_science.

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