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Trudeau, Ontario health minister say they're looking at collecting race-based pandemic data

The federal and Ontario governments say they're now working toward collecting race-based healthdata as part of their response tothe COVID-19 pandemic.

Cities, health experts, elected officials want race-based data collection to protect vulnerable groups

A Purolator driver wears a mask as he makes deliveries in Toronto on March 24, 2020. Experts say health authorities can't expect to understand how COVID-19 hotspots erupt without more detailed demographic information. (THE CANADIAN PRESS)

The federal and Ontario governments say they're now working toward collecting race-based healthdata as part of their response tothe COVID-19 pandemic.

Human rights commissions from across Canada have addedtheir voices to those of municipalities, health advocates and elected officials calling for the collection of raced-based COVID-19 data to ensure that vulnerable groups are protected.

"Colour-blindapproaches to health only serve to worsen health outcomes for black, Indigenous and racialized people because we can't address what we can't see," said B.C.'s Human Rights Commissioner Kasari Govender.

Federal, provincial and territorial human rights commissions say that collecting pandemic data withoutbreakdowns by race leaves public health officials with no window intoCOVID-19's impacton vulnerable populations.

Earlier today, both the federal and Ontario governments said that while theytypicallydo not collectrace-based health data, they are working on plans to start doing so now.

Watch: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government plans to start collecting race-based pandemic data:

Trudeau says federal government to collect race-based COVID-19 data

4 years ago
Duration 2:17
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government has invested millions of dollars towards improving the collection of race-based data.

"We recognize that there have long been challenges in Canada about collecting disaggregated data ... which is why a number of years ago, we invested millions of dollars towards Statistics Canada to start improving our ability to collect race-based data," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday in Ottawa.

"We've flowed greater funding to community organizations and grassroots organizations that are helping out people who we already know to be more vulnerable and marginalized But yes, we need to do a much better job around disaggregated data and that's something that we're going to do."

Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott said that local health agencies in the provincecan collect race-based data legallynow, should they choose to do so, providing they respect privacy and confidentiality.

'We haven't traditionally collected race-based data in health but there are a number of organizations that have come to us to ask us to do that," Elliott said.

'We are working with the anti-racism directorate to set up a broader framework in order to collect that in a meaningful way.It is something that we are working on as an active project."

Watch:Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott says her government is working on plans for race-based data collection:

'It is something that we are working on as an active project.'

4 years ago
Duration 0:41
Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott says that while her province has not traditionally collected race-based health data, it is working on a plan to start.

Canada does not collect race-based pandemic data. Both the United States and the United Kingdom have started doing so.

Earlier this week, Toronto City Council called on provincial health authorities to begin collecting province-wide data on COVID-19 cases, broken down by race, occupationand other "socioeconomic factors."

"The old adage of 'what gets measured gets done' is especially relevant right now. In order to tackle COVID-19, we must fully understand itand who is most at risk," Toronto CityCoun. Joe Cressy said in a media statement.

"Toronto's data has shown that while we're all susceptible to the virus, parts of the city are more impacted than others. In order to protect our residents and beat COVID-19, we need the Ontario Government to collect and share disaggregated data."

Basic data not collected: Trudeau

One of Canada's leading experts on the social causes of disease told CBC Radio's The House last week that Canada's failure to collect race-based data on COVID-19 infections amounts to discrimination by "neglect."

"Discrimination is not necessarily about what you do. It's often about what you don't do," said Dr. Kwame McKenzie, a psychiatry professor at the University of Toronto and CEO of the Wellesley Institute, a think tank that studies urban health issues.

"It's not about people being actively discriminatory or racist. It's sometimes about just neglect," he said. "And the fact that we haven't collected this data seems neglectful, because everybody really knew we should be collecting these data but it was never at the top of anybody's list of things to do."

Liberal MPP Mitzie Hunter, who represents the provincialriding of Scarborough-Guildwood, said the lack of information about who is getting the virus now, and who is most in danger of getting sick, puts people in her community at greater risk.

"One of the weaknesses in the Ontario Public Health Response is the lack of the collection of disaggregated data based on race and other demographic profiles that could help track the progress of this virus by individuals, where they work, where they live and income levels," shetold The House last week.

"All of those factors ... could help to save lives."

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh alsohas called for the collection of race-based data to improve health outcomes for vulnerable groups.

"We need to make sure we have the data, that there is race-based data that allows us to make the evidence-based decision making to remedy these injustices," Singh told the House of Commons earlier this week.

On Friday, Trudeau admitted that during the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak, public health officials were not alwayscollecting basic demographic information, such as age and gender.

"We know we need to do much better to properly understand where things are hitting hardest in this COVID-19 crisis," he said.

With files from the CBC's Chris Hall

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