Yes. Thank you very much.
The clinical trials that were done never really assessed the ability of the vaccines to prevent transmission. I haven't come across a component vaccine that is intramuscularly injected that can be very effective in preventing transmission of respiratory viruses long-term, so I think that understanding and having vaccine literacy is really helpful for the population.
If we had an intranasal live attenuated vaccine, which would be a better type of vaccine, especially for young, healthy kids, for that more comprehensive trained innate immunity and launching an appropriate type of immune response to a certain type of bug, that would probably be a better approach to take.
We didn't understand, I think, when the mandates were put in, because we didn't have a lot of.... The vaccines we're using, we actually have very little clinical experience with. We have never used them outside of emergency use authorization. I think that was the surprise for me as an immunologist. We started mandating the use of these vaccines without having clear data. The companies themselves are just starting to release the anonymized patient-level data. They wanted to not release that for the next 75 years, but we're starting to get more of that clarity on the type of efficacy that the vaccines really have in a placebo-controlled trial.
I would of course want to look at the risk-benefit, and that's where the risk stratification would have been really helpful to identify. We know that, by May 2020, when we didn't have vaccines, 95% of COVID-related mortality was in those over 65 years of age. I think that if we had focused on protecting the most vulnerable, it would have gone farther than putting blanket mandates on everyone, because that actually has the potential to increase vaccine hesitancy...and trust in vaccines and the public health care system in general in terms of recommendations.
I do believe that we should be focusing on providing immune protection and being transparent and looking at the evidence when we have an immune escape variant like omicron. How much data do we have that giving multiple boosters is going to be helpful or is good for people? We really need to diversify.
The first time I spoke to the committee members was back in June. I had really strongly suggested that we diversify the portfolio of the type of vaccines we have available for Canadians. We put all our eggs in one type of basket. We're still in a similar position. With omicron, it's a far less severe type of infection. I understand that people who are frail and who don't have good immunity require some more protection—