Thank you so much for this opportunity to appear before you. We had hoped to have Dr. Cordell Neudorf, who is our chair, and he's also a medical officer of health from Saskatoon region, but he wasn't able to be here today. I solicited some feedback from people who are on the ground who are dealing with this, as Dr. Kumar is as well.
In general from CPHA's perspective, we feel that much has been learned from previous public health emergencies. Thanks to the leadership of the Public Health Agency of Canada and our chief public health officer, we feel there have been dramatic improvements this time around. The level of coordination and communication and cooperation between the federal agencies and the provinces and territories has been quite exemplary when you compare it to something like SARS. We're seeing similar leadership at the provincial-territorial levels and at the local levels as well.
All that said, we do know we are dealing with a unique situation, and we're trying to respond to the spread of the virus in real time. I think that is what makes this so challenging. It's a bit like the canary in the mine shaft with SARS, and now with H1N1. It points to the vulnerabilities in our public health system and in our acute care system as well. I wanted to talk to you a little bit today about the observations from the ground from a public health perspective in terms of what we feel is working and where we anticipate challenges.
In general, I think the sense is that there is an overall plan, and people feel that plan is working well and is evolving. I think everyone understands it has to evolve because of the fact that this is complex and that, really, within a six-month period we have gone from identification of a virus to a vaccine, to full immunization campaigns, so it's quite remarkable.
The public health surveillance systems are working well and they're tracking the disease. Public health laboratories, as mentioned by Dr. Kumar, are doing exceptionally well. The development of provincial networks, and in particular new public health agencies.... B.C. isn't so new, but B.C., Quebec, and Ontario have made a real difference in terms of how we're able to respond this time around. The new pan-Canadian public health network has really given us an opportunity to have that ongoing dialogue and coordination, and it has allowed for more standardized responses, which has been very important.
Finally, most of you have probably seen the recent release of the preparedness guide. We're very pleased that the information to the public that is available now is very accurate and accessible.
We anticipate there will be challenges, and one of them probably isn't new to this committee. Public health in Canada continues to be chronically underfunded and under-resourced. There are many different figures, but what I do know for a fact is that it's between 4% to 6% of all health spending. When you look at that in terms of being able to mount a response, there are limitations. Most public health units today don't even have the resources to implement best practices in general, so it's very difficult to then add a pandemic into the mix. We're less than two weeks away from beginning the largest immunization campaign in decades, and what we're looking at is two to three times more doses than we would in a normal campaign. All of this is happening in a system that is, quite frankly, stretched to capacity, and all of it without any additional resources.
There's an implication and a cost to this. At a local level, public health is having to defer, cancel, or scale back on most other services for a one- to two-month period to mount this campaign. What does that mean to Canadians? Past experience shows us there may be a cohort of children who never catch up on their regular immunizations, mothers who don't get visited, and quite frankly, inspections that won't get done. Surge capacity simply doesn't exist in public health. As I've been told by my colleagues on the ground, we can't have two public health crises at a time; we couldn't deal with them.
We anticipate there will be information challenges for general practitioners, primarily physicians and acute care practitioners, because while there are public health networks that are well connected, acute care networks that are well connected, they aren't necessarily well connected to one another.
Another challenge would be to make sure we have the best information on the vaccine, because what you're dealing with are practitioners who then have to translate that science into clear accessible advice for their patients.
Most importantly, I think, given what Ms. Fralick just said as well, public health can't be reduced to sound bites, and that's what we've been trying to do lately, catch these sound bites and put them in the media, and it just doesn't work. It's far too complex. As someone told me, public health is just as much of an art as it is a science.
So while we do know that there will be differences in approach among provinces and territories, it is becoming increasingly confusing for the public, and we all have a responsibility to ensure that the best evidence-based recommendations are out there and are consistently promoted.
In closing, I just want to say I realize that this committee wants to know what's happening today and wants to know what we can do today, but we also need to look to the future. We need to have a long-term vision for public health. I urge you, in the context of your deliberations about the present, to look to the future.
Both CPHA and the Canadian Coalition for Public Health in the 21st Century--and Pamela Fralick and I co-chair that group--have made a series of recommendations, most recently in a backgrounder that was sent to all members of Parliament, but also in pre-budget consultation briefs. I won't go into that now. We have those documents available, and Christine, we can get them to you as soon as possible.
I think what's important to remember is that public health always operates under the radar. My famous line is that I want my family to understand what I do, because no one understands what public health is. It tends to operate under the radar, and we take all of our public health successes for granted. We have clean, safe drinking water and we don't wonder how that is. We prevent injuries by seat belt and workplace legislation, and we don't think about that. We think about it only when there's a crisis, and Walkerton, SARS, and H1N1 are perfect examples. So we need to use this current experience to inform the future. If we deal only with this issue at hand, we will invite another crisis in the future.
To bring us back to today, I actually want to reiterate what Ms. Fralick said. The two most important things that you can do as committee members today to support this national response to H1N1 is get your H1N1 immunization, do it publicly, and encourage your friends, families, and colleagues to do the same.
Thank you very much.