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Public health officials welcome moves to ease restrictions as COVID-19 metrics improve
CBC
The improving state of the COVID-19 pandemic means Canadian jurisdictions can now ease public health restrictions further, federal officials said Friday.
Trends of severe illness are declining in most areas of the country, the Public Health Agency of Canada reported during its weekly pandemic news conference.
Nationally, the rate of patients being treated for COVID-19 in hospitals has dropped by 15 per cent compared to last week.
"We need to turn our focus on easing societal disruption," said Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam.
That message comes as provinces across the country are rapidly lifting restrictions and vaccine mandates in a variety of settings.
Alberta and Saskatchewan have moved most aggressively to scrap COVID-19 measures, including requirements for masks and vaccine passports in virtually all situations.
Ontario followed on March 1 by lifting its vaccine passport system and capacity limits in all indoor settings. Quebec is slated to introduce similar changes later this month.
While Tam noted that a return to normal life is prudent given the recession of the Omicron wave, she also advised Canadians to assume more personal responsibility as they go about life in a society with relatively few restrictions in place.
"Regaining in-person social and economic activities while the pandemic is still ongoing and the virus is not going away means we must use all that we have learned to do this safely and make it last," she said.
Compared to several provinces, the federal government has been slower to lift restrictions and vaccine mandates.
An unvaccinated person in Alberta, for example, is now allowed to go to any indoor setting with no capacity limit and no mask requirement — but that same person would not be permitted to board a plane.
Tam said federal agencies in charge of those rules, including Transport Canada, are evaluating the epidemiological situation and "will be making any policy adjustments as needed in the coming days and weeks."
Public health officials say Canadians should routinely perform what they call "individual risk assessments" as restrictions are lifted.
"Regularly checking in on the local epidemiology where you are or where you are going is important for keeping up on recommendations," Tam said.