Ottawa Public Health third-party review gives thumbs up to local pandemic response
Ottawa Public Health third-party review gives thumbs up to local pandemic response
The preliminary findings of a third party review of OPH’s pandemic response was presented to the Ottawa Board of Health Monday.
Report author Dr. Paul Gully is a professor at the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia, and a former public health officer. He says, under the circumstances, the OPH team did a good job.
“It is incredibly difficult to plan for what we don’t know, Gully said. “The way Ottawa did respond, it would have helped to have better information ahead of time. I think was good.”
The preliminary recommendations included having a pandemic plan, including scenarios for extended emergencies, as well as maintaining a strong focus on community engagement and examining the consequences on staff, supervisors and managers at OPH.
Ottawa residents CTV News spoke to mostly agreed that OPH did the best they could given the circumstances.
Francois Latreille said he thought they did a good job and could not have planned it better considering what happened.
“I think nobody expected what happened, no one expected it would last so long and because of that you could not plan everything from the ge- go,” Latreille said.
Creativity helped OPH succeed, and engaging influencers like Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds helped push OPH’s communication efforts world wide.
Ottawa resident Stephen Faubert felt he was kept informed of pandemic restrictions by OPH even if the messages from different levels of government sometimes conflicted.
“I think their messaging was fairly clear on most of the rules, sometimes thought the province was not as clear,” Faubert said. “I think they have done a fairly good job. I’ve tried to follow their directions.”
Some hope if another public health emergency occurs, more emphasis can be put on why, and not just what we need to do. Meghan Matthews was frustrated when rules or precautions would change with little explanation.
“Sometimes it seemed that they did not quite know what they were doing or were contradicting what they were saying so people were following rules and it ended up not being the right thing,” Matthews said. “I feel if everyone understood more than we could be educated properly instead of just being spit out things that ended up kind of being wrong.”
Ottawa Board of Health member Peter Tilley summed up the boards response to the preliminary report, saying “It was nice to see this objective recognition of the quick response and effective response of Dr. Etches and the team at Ottawa Public Health.”
Dr Etches will present OPH’s response to the report at the next Board of Health Meeting, outlining how the health unit will adopt the report’s recommendations.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Poilievre preferred among Conservatives, but Charest favoured by Canadians: poll
Ontario MP Pierre Poilievre remains the heavy favourite to be the next Conservative party leader but he trails opponent Jean Charest for support among Canadians as a whole.

Ontario nurse facing charges after alleged assault that left 2-year-old in hospital
An Ontario nurse is facing charges in connection with the alleged assault of a two-year-old boy with “significant medical limitations” in Niagara Region.
How one Canadian family of five is coping with the highest inflation in years
With inflation rising at its fastest pace in nearly 40 years, the cost of everything from food to gas has skyrocketed. Canadians across the country are feeling squeezed, but big families with multiple children are at times shouldering much of the higher costs — and changing demographics and consumer patterns have left some of them more exposed to inflation than in previous generations.
Exposure to synthetic 'forever chemical' linked to liver cancer, study finds
Exposure to synthetic ‘forever chemicals’ often polluting the environment has been linked to the most common type of liver cancer, according to a recent study.
Heavier flow, breakthrough bleeding reported among some individuals after COVID-19 vaccine: study
A new study found that people with regular menstruation cycles and those who typically do not menstruate either experienced a heavier flow or breakthrough bleeding after being vaccinated against COVID-19.
2,300-year-old Chinese chemistry formula deciphered after analyzing ancient coins
The ingredients in a 2,300-year-old ancient Chinese chemistry formula have finally been identified, revealing new secrets about metallurgy in ancient China.
ICU physician: Ford government is 'gaslighting' health-care workers
An ICU physician is criticizing Ont. Premier Doug Ford's throne speech, saying the government 'has no plan' to help health-care workers and may not believe 'there's any type of crisis' in the province's overburdened hospital system.
EXCLUSIVE | 'Train surfer' under police investigation speaks about his dangerous adventures
The man who claims to be one of the people seen 'surfing' on the roof of a moving subway train in Toronto is speaking exclusively to CTV News about his stunts and the looming threat of a police arrest.