As provinces ask people to manage COVID risks, experts say the public has less data
OTTAWA — At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, retired teacher Lois Armstrong said local health officials where she lives in Kingston, Ont., provided daily updates about outbreaks, cases and deaths in the community.
Now, the 68-year-old said people are being asked to take a bigger role in managing their risk but information from health authorities is less available than before. Data such as the location of outbreaks is no longer made public, she added.
“I think it’s very difficult for the average person to assess their own risk,” Armstrong said Monday in an interview. “Kingston is one of the hot spots of Ontario, but they still are only posting the information three times a week, and you can’t go get tested unless you’re really high risk or really sick. So there’s no way of knowing.”
As public health measures have lifted across the country, several indicators of COVID-19 are rising all across Canada, driven by the highly contagious sub-lineage of the Omicron variant known as BA.2.


