Dr. Joel Kettner: A RARE VOICE OF SANITY

Dr. Joel Kettner: A RARE VOICE OF SANITY

Postby Oscar » Mon Mar 16, 2020 10:02 am

A RARE VOICE OF SANITY ON THE CORONAVIRUS UNINVITED ON CBC’S CROSS COUNTRY CHECK-UP

From: Marjaleena Repo <mrepo@sasktel.net>
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;

Dear Friends,

I hope you will appreciate this voice of sanity in the overall ocean of social-political-medical madness that has gripped Saskatchewan and all of Canada knowing that only one person has died in Canada, and even that one, a senior in a care home in B.C., might have died not of coronavirus, but with it, as Dr. Joel Kettner suggests.
You can hear his voice on the program itself at:
[ https://www.facebook.com/CBCCrossCountr ... __tn__=kC- ]

Marjaleena

= = =

A RARE VOICE OF SANITY ON THE CORONAVIRUS UNINVITED ON CBC’S CROSS COUNTRY CHECK-UP

I listened to the program, getting bored with the usual information and prognostication about the virus, which totally followed the governmental prescriptions for shutting the country down and forcing people into “social distancing” of the worst kind, provinces and cities competing on who can do both most thoroughly. 

That is why it was a pleasant surprise that a questioning and authoritative voice was heard on the program, uninvited, that of a certain Dr. Joel Kettner from Manitoba who made his point of view about over-reacting to the virus and the lack of validity for “social distancing” known to the listeners. (I have transcribed his contribution which can be heard on the program at 1:13 to 1:20.) He has clearly lots more to say and would have done so, but was cut off by the host who has little tolerance for anything that is not politically correct, on this issue or any other. We need to hear much more from this Dr. Kettner! 

CBC Radio, Cross Country Check-up, March 15, 2020.
You can hear his voice on the program itself at:
[ https://www.facebook.com/CBCCrossCountr ... __tn__=kC- ]
 

HOST DUNCAN McCUE: Dr. Joel Kettner is on the line from Manitoba. Hi, Dr. Kettner, welcome to Check-up. You teach at the University of Manitoba and are a former chief medical officer of Manitoba, I understand.  So, what do you think of how we are coping right now?

DR. KETTNER: Well, I don’t know what to think, frankly, but I’ll tell you what I do think. First I want to say that in 30 years of public health medicine I have never seen anything like this, anything anywhere near like this. I am not talking about the pandemic, because I’ve seen thirty of them, one every year. It is called influenza. And other respiratory illness viruses, we don’t always know what they are. But I’ve never seen this reaction, and I’m trying to understand why. I have to say that I really feel for my colleagues that are in public health practice. It is easy for me to sit in the armchair of my office and look at this and observe it, and be critical and have ideas. But I really feel for them for three reasons. One is that the data they are getting is incomplete to really make sense of the size of the threat. We are getting very crude numbers of cases and deaths, very little information about testing rates, contagious analysis, severity rates, who is being hospitalized, who is in intensive care, who is dying, what are the definitions to decide if someone died of the coronavirus or just died with the coronavirus. There is so much important data that is very hard to get to guide the decisions on how serious a threat this is. 

The other part is we actually do not have that much good evidence for these social distancing methods. It was just a couple of reviews in the CDC Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal which showed that although some of them might work, we really don’t know to what degree, and the evidence is pretty weak. 

The third part is that the pressure that is being put our public health doctors and public health leaders. And that pressure is coming from various places. The first place it came from was the Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) when he said “this is a grave threat and a public enemy number one.” I have never heard a Director General of the WHO use terms like that. Then when he announced the pandemic he said he is doing it “because of a grave, alarming, quick spread of the disease, and an alarming amount of inaction around the world.”  That puts a huge pressure on public health doctors and leaders and advisors and huge pressure on governments. And then you get this what seems like a cascade of decision making that really puts pressure on countries and governments — provincial, state,  to sort of to keep up with this action that Dr. Hoffman [an earlier  guest on the program] said that we are trying to avoid, or should avoid, which is an over-reaction.  I don’t know what is an appropriate reaction, but I do know that I am having trouble trying to figure this out and I… 

[Interrupted by DUNCAN McCUE]:  So I’m sure that your medical colleagues across the country are probably nodding their heads when you say they don’t have enough data, that they lack data. I suspect health professionals around the world wish they had more data whether it is testing rates, severity rates, all that kind of thing. So it’s probably a valid concern. But you mentioned that you are not confident with some of the literature with regard to social distancing and its effectiveness… What is the basis of your concern then? If social distancing is debatable in your mind, what do you worry about then? 

DR. KETTNER: I worry about the consequences of social distancing. I worry about people who are losing their jobs. I worry about interruptions with the healthcare system itself. There are many doctors in Manitoba in quarantine right now, because they have returned from other countries. I worry about the message to the public, about the fear of coming into contact with people, being in the same space as people, shaking their hands, having meetings with people. I worry about many, many consequences related to that. If you look at the data for what we are actually dealing with, I want to give this example. In Hubei, in the province of Hubei, where there has been the most cases and deaths by far, the actual number of cases reported is 1 per 1000 people, and the actual rate of deaths reported is 1 per 20,000. So maybe that would help to put things into perspective, as to the actual rate and risks of this condition, because it is a lot lower in any other part of the world, and certainly in Canada and the United States.

DUNCAN McCUE [INTERRUPTS]:  Joel, I’m going to jump in. Thanks very much for sharing these thoughts.
Oscar
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