Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Poll shows some see COVID-19 warnings as overblown

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Sep, 2020 07:16 PM
  • Poll shows some see COVID-19 warnings as overblown

A new survey suggests there are Canadians who believe that warnings from public officials about the threat of COVID-19 are vastly overblown.

Almost one-quarter of respondents in an online poll made public Tuesday by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies say they believe public health and government officials exaggerate in their warnings, including about the need for measures like physical distancing to slow the spread of the pandemic.

Regionally, respondents in Alberta were more likely to believe the threat was embellished, followed by Atlantic Canada and Quebec, with Ontario at the bottom.

Broken down by age, younger respondents were more likely than those over 55 to believe statements were being exaggerated.

The online poll was conducted Sept. 11 to 13 and surveyed 1,539 adult Canadians. It cannot be assigned a margin of error because internet-based polls are not considered random samples.

Leger executive vice-president Christian Bourque said the results may explain something else that came up in the survey: That a majority of respondents said they have relaxed how strictly they adhere to public health recommendations.

Among those recommendations are things like wearing a mask in public, avoiding large gatherings and trying to maintain a two-metre distance between people.

"There is a link. If you believe we're exaggerating the disease, you're more likely to have relaxed on your strict observance of the rules in place," Bourque says.

About 57 per cent of respondents in the survey said that they had eased their adherence to one or more of public health safety measures over the last month.

Proper physical distancing was the most likely to be relaxed at 37 per cent of respondents, followed by wearing a mask outside the home at 33 per cent and not gathering in large groups at 31 per cent.

Respondents age 18 to 34 were the most likely to have relaxed on how closely they followed measures, with nearly three-quarters of them saying they had done so in the past month.

Over the last month, case counts have gone up for young people, with Canada's chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam warning anew on Monday that the country can't let its guard down.

"It's a global pandemic and we don't have to look very far to find countries that have lost control of their pandemic and are in serious condition, both from a health perspective and an economic perspective," federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu said on Tuesday.

"In fact, the health of Canada depends on all of us taking this seriously, but the economy of Canada depends on that as well. And those things go hand in hand."

Weekly questioning shows an uptick in the percentage of survey respondents who believed the worst of the crisis is yet to come, which hit 45 per cent on Sept. 13, the highest level it has been since April 13.

Nearly two-thirds of respondents in the survey believe the country is heading back to some form of lockdown, similar to what happened in March and April.

How closely Canadians follow public health recommendations may rest on how soon officials declare the start of a second wave, Bourque said, or if jurisdictions crack down harder on those breaking rules, such as Quebec started doing in recent days.

"We're not at this pivotal moment where people feel we need to go back to how we used to be, where basically Canadians were exemplary in terms of following the safety measures put in place," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Pricey Tours Of Decaying Titanic Shipwreck Delayed Until June 2020

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Adventure tourists who paid $168,000 each to help survey the Titanic shipwreck off Newfoundland have been told their much-anticipated dives are being postponed.    

Pricey Tours Of Decaying Titanic Shipwreck Delayed Until June 2020

Dominic LeBlanc Announces He Will Run Again After Success With Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Fight

MONCTON, N.B. — Veteran New Brunswick Liberal MP Dominic LeBlanc, recovering from cancer, says he will be a candidate in the next federal election in his riding of Beausejour.    

Dominic LeBlanc Announces He Will Run Again After Success With Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Fight

Canadian General Stephen Lacroix Named Honorary Parade Marshal To Mark 1919 Victory Stampede

CALGARY — This year's Calgary Stampede parade will be marking the 100th anniversary of what was called the Victory Stampede after the First World War.    

Canadian General Stephen Lacroix Named Honorary Parade Marshal To Mark 1919 Victory Stampede

Manitoba Mountie Pleads Not Guilty To Manslaughter In Shooting Death Of Driver

Manitoba Mountie Pleads Not Guilty To Manslaughter In Shooting Death Of Driver
THOMPSON, Man. — An RCMP officer pleaded not guilty Monday to manslaughter, criminal negligence and other charges stemming from an on-duty shooting following a vehicle chase.

Manitoba Mountie Pleads Not Guilty To Manslaughter In Shooting Death Of Driver

'He Was Being Creepy:' Alleged Victim Testifies At Mountie's Sex Assault Trial

'He Was Being Creepy:' Alleged Victim Testifies At Mountie's Sex Assault Trial
A woman has testified that an RCMP officer was "being creepy" when he arrested her in central Alberta three years ago and told her to show him her breasts.  

'He Was Being Creepy:' Alleged Victim Testifies At Mountie's Sex Assault Trial

Quebec Mother, Daughter Charged With Drunk Driving Within Hours Of Each Other

Quebec Mother, Daughter Charged With Drunk Driving Within Hours Of Each Other
MAGOG, Que. — Police east of Montreal arrested a 50-year-old woman for driving under the influence on Sunday as she came to bail out her daughter who had been arrested on a similar offence just hours earlier.

Quebec Mother, Daughter Charged With Drunk Driving Within Hours Of Each Other