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Renewed calls for masking in Alberta schools as viral illnesses surge, hospitals struggle

The pediatrics section of the Alberta Medical Association, which is made up of over  300 physicians, is calling for temporary masking requirements in schools as pediatric hospitals are overwhelmed with a surge of viral illnesses. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press - image credit)
The pediatrics section of the Alberta Medical Association, which is made up of over 300 physicians, is calling for temporary masking requirements in schools as pediatric hospitals are overwhelmed with a surge of viral illnesses. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press - image credit)

Alberta pediatricians are calling on the province to bring in temporary school mask mandates, as hospitals struggle to treat all of the province's sick kids.

A trio of viral illnesses — Influenza, RSV and COVID-19 — has driven a dramatic spike in ER visits and hospitalizations at both the Alberta Children's Hospital in Calgary and the Stollery Children's Hospital in Edmonton.

Members of the pediatrics section of the Alberta Medical Association, which represents over 300 physicians, sent a letter to Alberta's chief medical officer of health, Dr. Mark Joffe, on Wednesday, calling for stronger public health protections to give overwhelmed hospitals a chance to recover.

The letter was also shared with Health Minister Jason Copping, Education Minister Adriana LaGrange and school board chairs.

"We don't feel like there has been any mitigation, any response to an increasingly overwhelming and concerning crisis," said Edmonton pediatrician Dr. Tehseen Ladha. "l absolutely think it's dangerous."

Ladha and her colleagues are calling for a number of measures, including a temporary mask requirement for students and teachers in schools.

CBC
CBC

"The huge concern is that if there's no action that's taken, that there will be children that fall through the cracks. ... Really what we're trying to do is prevent that," said Ladha.

Red Deer pediatrician Dr. Kyle McKenzie said the best hope now is to try and slow viral transmission rates.

"If we decrease the odds in enough people, we prevent enough infections over a short period of time, that might stop the hospital from being swamped," he said.

"So that if your child goes out and plays hockey and sustains a major facial injury there's going to actually be someone to be able to treat that."

The provincial government recently banned school boards from bringing in their own masking rules. But the chief medical officer of health can issue public health orders that would take precedence.

Government response

CBC News asked Alberta Health as well as the offices of both the health minister and education minister for a response.

"School mask mandates ended in the last school year based on a review of the evidence," Alberta Healths spokesperson Charity Wallace said in an emailed statement.

"No province has re-introduced school mask mandates."

The pediatricians are also calling for a number of other health measures including:

  • Increased public messaging on influenza and COVID-19 vaccines in children

  • Increased accessibility to vaccines, especially in marginalized populations, through school vaccine clinics or mobile vaccine services.

  • Approval and support of the placement of HEPA purifiers in school classrooms.

  • Increased messaging on ventilation for indoor gatherings.

  • Encouragement of frequent hand washing, access to sanitizer and sanitization of high-touch surfaces in schools and essential indoor public spaces.

  • Increased messaging around staying home from work and school when sick.

The province said it has a social media, online and billboard campaign in place to promote influenza immunization and it plans additional promotion in the coming weeks.

According to Wallace, Alberta Health has also sent out over one million texts and emails encouraging flu vaccination.

School-based COVID-19 and flu vaccine clinics, though, do not appear to be in the works.

"Based on past uptake, it is not expected that a school-based influenza immunization program would produce meaningful increase in immunization rates," Wallace said.

Provincial influenza data, updated Thursday, show children and teens account for 30 per cent of Alberta's total flu hospitalizations so far this season. Two children have died.

Nationally,  the Public Health Agency of Canada's Fluwatch report (for the week ending Nov. 26), shows pediatric hospitalizations are already higher than at the peak of a normal flu season.  And Alberta is reporting some of the highest rates of flu activity in the country.

Meanwhile, Ladha said if the government chooses not to act, she hopes parents will take action on their own.

"We hope that our letter provides that education and empowerment that families need to send their children to school in masks or to advocate for HEPA purifiers in the classroom, or to be more aware that there are vaccinations available for their children."