Guidelines for vaccinated Canadians will only evolve ‘when safe,’ Tam says

0
222

Public health guidelines will need to evolve as more Canadians are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, but we’re not yet at that point, Canada’s top doctor said Tuesday.

Dr. Theresa Tam said measures will adapt “when it is safe to do so … based on evolving scientific evidence and expert advice.”

It will be about “balancing risk and benefits,” she said.

Read more: Follow public health advice, make ‘good decisions’ after vaccination, expert says

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Monday released new guidelines for vaccinated individuals, saying they can safely meet indoors without masks in small groups.

The recommendations also say that vaccinated people can come together in the same way — in a single household — with people considered at low-risk for severe disease, such as in the case of vaccinated grandparents visiting healthy children and grandchildren.

Story continues below advertisement

However, they should still don masks in public and avoid large gatherings altogether.

The guidance is designed to address a changing landscape, the CDC director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said Monday, as more adult Americans get vaccinated.

Click to play video 'Clearing up misconceptions surrounding COVID-19 vaccine efficacy' 2:39Clearing up misconceptions surrounding COVID-19 vaccine efficacy

Clearing up misconceptions surrounding COVID-19 vaccine efficacy

Canada still lags the U.S. in fully vaccinating its population.

[ Sign up for our Health IQ newsletter for the latest coronavirus updates ]

As of Monday, the U.S. had fully vaccinated about 31 million Americans — or about nine per cent of the population — whereas Canada sits around 1.42 per cent of its population.

When asked about the guidelines Tuesday, Tam said there will come a time where health officials at the federal and provincial levels will look at these kinds of adjustments but that it’s just not safe to do so yet.

“We have considerable community transmission at the moment, although things have improved. We don’t know what the variants are about to do and whether we can keep control of their spread. At the same moment, the vaccine coverage is just beginning,” she said.

Story continues below advertisement

Read more: So you got a COVID-19 shot. Now what can you do?

She said Canada’s eventual approach needs to be “thoughtful, noting that the CDC’s new tweaks are “quite precautionary.”

“It is important that we evolve our public health approach as more Canadians are getting vaccinated.”

But taking caution remains warranted, even if you are fully vaccinated, said Tam.

Scientists are still studying the vaccines’ effectiveness against other variants of the coronavirus and whether the shots themselves make a sizable impact on transmissibility.

Click to play video 'Easing of restrictions due to vaccinations not happening soon' 2:06Easing of restrictions due to vaccinations not happening soon

Easing of restrictions due to vaccinations not happening soon

In other words, it’s not totally clear whether vaccinated people can still spread the infection to others, which is why Tam and the CDC maintain that even those who have received the shots should continue to wear masks and practice physical distancing in public.

Story continues below advertisement

“I think our key message is to keep up your current personal protective measures for now,” Tam said.

“Together with other chief medical officers and experts we will provide evolving recommendations.”

Read more: New data suggests COVID-19 could become endemic

The key part, she said, will be getting as many people in Canada vaccinated as fast as possible.

“That has got to be our real focus,” she said.

“Over time, we will have more information that shows what we can do in the context of people who are fully vaccinated.”

–With files from the Associated Press and Reuters

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.