SASKATOON More than 100 years ago, a Canadian doctor tried to sound the alarm on residential schools but historians say he was silenced by government officials. Indigenous advocates working to reclaim his legacy now say a great deal can be learned from his example. In the early part of the 20th century, medical health officer Dr. Peter H. Bryce repeatedly warned his superiors at the Department of Indian Affairs of the rampant spread of tuberculosis killing Indigenous children in residential schools. He spent months examining dozens of schools in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta and found unsanitary conditions, poor health practices, buildings that were prone to fires, and a lack of ventilation. In a damning report to the government in 1907, initially hidden from the public by his bosses, he wrote “it’s almost as if the prime conditions of the outbreak of epidemics had been deliberately created.”
USA Today
Jun 06, 2021 7:15 PM ET We as a country are willing to tolerate a certain level of risk and still go about a normal level of life, said Dr. Aaron Carroll, a pediatrician and professor of pediatrics at Indiana University School of Medicine. It s becoming clear that that s likely what we re going to have to do with COVID. We re going to have to learn to live with it.
In a good flu season, nearly 100 Americans a day might die of influenza, Carroll said at an American Public Health Association panel recently.
That 100 deaths a day during flu season is what Americans tolerate, said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, San Francisco.