Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tightening rules for unvaxxed justified: experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2022 02:32 PM
  • Tightening rules for unvaxxed justified: experts

MONTREAL - As Quebec officials consider tightening the rules for the unvaccinated, health experts in the province say expanding the vaccine passport system is justified because of the high number of COVID-19 patients in hospital who have refused to be jabbed.

Others, however, say the people who are rejecting COVID-19 vaccines are doing so out of ideology and likely won't be swayed by the government's latest restrictions.

Last week, Health Minister Christian Dubé said proof of vaccination will be required to shop at Quebec's cannabis and liquor monopolies starting Jan. 18 and that the passport could be expanded further to include businesses such as shopping malls and personal care salons. Quebec's college of physicians on Friday said the vaccine passport should be required for places such as large department stores, libraries and museums.

Dubé has repeatedly said that about 10 per cent of Quebec adults are unvaccinated but represent about 50 per cent of COVID-19-related hospitalizations. But data published by the Health Department on Monday indicated that 32 per cent of the 4,094 people hospitalized with COVID-19 in the past 28 days had either been unvaccinated or were fewer than 14 days removed from their first dose.

Dr. Donald Vinh, an infectious disease specialist at McGill University Health Centre, said he supported an expanded vaccine passport system because it could encourage more people to get vaccinated. Any reduction in the number of COVID-19 patients in Quebec's hospitals would help, he added.

"If anywhere between a third to a half of those hospitalizations could be prevented, we would not be having a concern about our surge capacity," he said in an interview Monday, adding that the vaccine passport is necessary "not to eliminate hospitalizations but to prevent those that are preventable."

Quebecers must show proof of vaccination to enter places such as gyms, restaurants and bars, which have been closed since mid-December. Liquor and cannabis stores, however, remain open, as are malls and other retail stores.

Vardit Ravitsky, a professor of bioethics at Université de Montréal, said that as the pressure on the health-care system rises, so does the justification for measures that push people to get vaccinated.

"Right now, the numbers are scary, because the rate of transmission, the rate of infection is very high and the risk is to our health-care system," she said in an interview Monday. "Therefore, the risk is to everybody and especially to vulnerable people."

Ravitsky said she sees vaccine passports as way to encourage people to get vaccinated — making them less likely to require a hospital bed.

"The number one reason is to incentivize, to encourage vaccination, by telling people, 'look, you have a choice,'" she said. "Of course you have a choice: we're not going to show up at your door and tie you down and vaccinate you. But if you make a choice, it comes with a price tag and the price tag is becoming higher and higher, because your choice is creating a higher and higher risk for us."

While there are other measures that could be taken to encourage vaccination, such as fines, she said the passport system is fairer than the alternatives. Given the risk to the health-care system, Ravitsky said she sees the vaccine passport as a justified limit on freedom.

"Freedom is never absolute and without limits," she said. "I don't have the freedom to drink a bottle of wine and get behind the wheel."

Kim Lavoie, co-director of the Montreal Behavioural Medicine Centre, said that while she agrees the government should restrict the movement in public places of unvaccinated people, she's not convinced expanding the passport system will change their minds.

"Their behaviour is not tied to the pandemic; their behaviour is more tied to ideology," she said.

While the number of first-dose appointments has increased significantly in Quebec over the past few days, Lavoie said she doesn't think it's related to the expansion of the vaccine passport to cannabis and liquor stores. More than 50 per cent of those new appointments were among children five to 11, she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. forest company seeks extension of injunction

B.C. forest company seeks extension of injunction
A lawyer for Teal Cedar Products Ltd. told a B.C. Supreme Court judge that the protests against logging are becoming more sophisticated, organized and dangerous and “anarchy” will result if the extension is not granted until September 2022.    

B.C. forest company seeks extension of injunction

B.C. offers incentives for health-care workers

B.C. offers incentives for health-care workers
Health Minister Adrian Dix says the aim is to get more health-care workers to move to the north and stay there as many parts of the country experience a shortage of nurses in particular.

B.C. offers incentives for health-care workers

B.C. ineffective overseeing dam safety: auditor

B.C. ineffective overseeing dam safety: auditor
Michael Pickup said the Ministry of Forests, Land, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development has not adequately verified or enforced dam owners' compliance with key safety requirements.

B.C. ineffective overseeing dam safety: auditor

677 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

677 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
Of the active cases, 288 individuals are in hospital and 140 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.In the past 24 hours, one new death (Northern Health) has been reported, for an overall total of 1,866.    

677 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Vancouver protest leads to two people arrested

Vancouver protest leads to two people arrested
A man and a woman were arrested for mischief and intimidation by blocking or obstructing a highway. Both were released pending a future court date.

Vancouver protest leads to two people arrested

Warmer-than-normal fall expected this year

Warmer-than-normal fall expected this year
The network says in its fall forecast that much of Canada can expect some spells of warm temperatures in the next month or so, mixed in with the wide swings in weather the season typically brings.

Warmer-than-normal fall expected this year