| Literature DB >> 35102238 |
Stephanie Long1, David Loutfi1, Jay S Kaufman2, Tibor Schuster3.
Abstract
Canadian coronavirus (COVID-19) case statistics reported by governmental bodies and news outlets are central to inform the public and to guide health policy. We searched Canadian governmental and news outlets websites to determine how COVID-19 case statistics were reported to the general public, whether they were reported with appropriate denominators, data sources, and accounted for age, sex, and race or ethnicity. Canadian COVID-19 data reporting practices were found to have limited utility due to varying case definitions, heterogeneous and dynamic testing criteria, lack of appropriate standardization accounting for dynamics, sizes, and characteristics of the populations being tested. Population-wide representative COVID-19 testing should be implemented to enable accurate estimation of the scale and dynamics of the epidemiological situation. Comprehensive COVID-19 data on underrepresented and marginalized populations should be collected and reported in an effort to develop equitable health policies.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; Disease reporting; Epidemiological reporting standards
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35102238 PMCID: PMC8802988 DOI: 10.1057/s41271-022-00337-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Policy ISSN: 0197-5897 Impact factor: 3.526
Data extraction form
| Governmental websites | News outlets |
|---|---|
⋅ COVID-19 case definition ⋅ COVID-19 symptoms* ⋅ COVID-19 testing eligibility criteria ⋅ Use of denominators when reporting COVID-19 case statistics (such as per 100,000) ⋅ Whether sources were provided for their COVID-19 case statistics ⋅ Relevant population characteristics such as age, sex or gender, and race or ethnicity | ⋅ Presence of dedicated COVID-19 tracker ⋅ Use of denominators when reporting COVID-19 case statistics ⋅ Whether sources were provided for their reported COVID-19 case statistics ⋅ Relevant population characteristics such as age, sex or gender, and race or ethnicity |
*Symptom data was extracted verbatim from provincial and territorial websites, with no changes made to how each reported symptoms or grouped similar symptoms
Fig. 1COVID-19 case definitions used across Canada. Population sizes of each province and territory have been included (as of 23 July 2021) [80]
Fig. 2Epidemiological reporting standards of a Canadian Provinces and b Canadian News Outlets
COVID-19 symptoms or testing criteria (or both) and data reported (as of 19 August 2021)
BC British Columbia, AB Alberta, SK Saskatchewan, MB Manitoba, ON Ontario, QC Quebec, NB New Brunswick, NS Nova Scotia, PEI Prince Edward Island, NFL Newfoundland and Labrador, YU Yukon Territories, NWT Northwest Territories, NU Nunavut
AOnly in children or infants
1New symptoms added between third (29 June 2020) and fourth (15 September 2020) extraction points
1.1New symptoms added between fourth (15 September 2020) and fifth (15 January 2021) extraction points
1.2New symptoms added between fifth (15 January 2021) and final (19 August 2021) extraction points
2Removed from symptoms list between third (29 June 2020) and fourth (15 September 2020) extraction points
2.1Removed from symptoms list between fourth (15 September 2020) and fifth (15 January 2021) extraction points
2.2Removed from symptoms list between fifth (15 January 2021) and final (19 August 2021) extraction points
aAs of 8 June 2020. Asymptomatic testing no longer available, identified between fourth (15 September 2020) and fifth (15 January 2021) extraction points. As of 29 July 2021, testing is only available to symptomatic Albertans, those linked to a known outbreak (symptomatic or not), those travelling, or requiring a Point-of-Care test through their workplace
bAs of 29 June 2020
cAs of 19 August 2021 asymptomatic testing no longer available
dBecame available between fourth (15 September 2020) and fifth (15 January 2021) extraction points
eBecame available between fifth (15 January 2021) and final (19 August 2021) extraction points
Fig. 3Comparing COVID-19 case statistics in Montreal and Laval (Quebec, Canada). Data
source: Government of Quebec (as of 19 August 2021): a Absolute case counts and b proportions (cases/population size). Note These curves do not reflect changes in testing capacities or selection of individuals being testing over time
Examples of news outlet reporting of COVID-19 pandemic
| Date | Headline and quote | Issue | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reporting absolute counts of COVID-19 cases | Comparing across geographical regions | ||
| 3 April 2020 | “‘Montreal is the epicentre of the pandemic,’ public health director says “We are starting to come into the ascending slope of the epidemic,” with 480 new cases for a total of 2,642.””— | ✔ | ✔ |
| 22 April 2020 | “With 9,856 cases, Montreal region remains Canada’s COVID-19 epicentre.”— | ✔ | ✔ |
| 11 May 2020 | “Trudeau fears COVD-19 deaths will spike in Montreal, Canada’s virus epicentre, as Legault reopens Quebec.”— | ✔ | |
| 15 May 2020 | “‘Society failed’: Legault visits Montreal as Quebec becomes the world’s seventh deadliest COVID-19 epicentre.”— | ✔ | |
| 21 May2020 | “Nurses recount ‘hell’ in Laval, Canada’s new COVID-19 epicentre, and ask what they can withstand.”— | ✔ | |
| 13 January 2021 | “Montreal ‘once again the epicentre’ of COVID-19 crisis as city adds hundreds of hospital beds.”— | ✔ | |
| 26 February 2021 | “B.C. the Florida of Canada? Epidemiologist says his comparison was meant as a warning”— | ✔ | |
| 24 March 2021 | “How Regina’s COVID-19 cases compare to other Canadian, American cities”— | ✔ | ✔ |
| 15 May 2021 | “Why does Manitoba have nearly twice as many COVID-19 deaths as Saskatchewan?”— | ✔ | ✔ |
| 5 August 2021 | “Ontario reports 213 new COVID-19 cases; 14 more deaths with 12 due to data clean-up.”— | ✔ | |
a'Montreal is the epicentre of the pandemic,' public health director says. 2020 [cited 8 June 2020]. Available from: https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/montreal-hit-by-rapid-rise-in-number-of-covid-19-cases
bLalonde M. With 9,856 cases, Montreal region remains Canada's COVID-19 epicentre. Montreal Gazette. 22 April 2020
cThe Canadian Press, National Post Staff. Trudeau fears COVID-19 deaths will spike in Montreal, Canada's virus epicentre, as Legault reopens Quebec. National Post. 11 May 2020
dThe Canadian Press. 'Society failed': Legault visits Montreal as Quebec becomes the world's seventh deadliest COVID-19 epicentre. The National Post. 15 May 2020
eGreig K, Ross S. Nurses recount 'hell' in Laval, Canada's new COVID-19 epicentre, and ask what they can withstand. CTV News. 23 May 2020
fLaframboise K. Montreal ‘once again the epicentre’ of COVID-19 crisis as city adds hundreds of hospital beds 2021 [updated 13 January 2021. Available from: https://globalnews.ca/news/7574222/montreal-coronavirus-update-january-2021/
gHolliday I. B.C. the Florida of Canada? Epidemiologist says his comparison was meant as a warning. CTV News. 26 February 2021
hSoloman M. How Regina's COVID-19 cases compare to other Canadian, American cities. CTV News. 2021
iMacLean C. Why does Manitoba have nearly twice as many COVID-19 deaths as Saskatchewan? CBC News. 2021
jWilson K. Ontario reports 213 new COVID-19 cases; 14 more deaths with 12 due to data clean-up. CP24. 5 August 2021