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Opinion: Ageism and the pandemic: How Canada continues to let older adults suffer and die from COVID-19

COVID-19 is the third-leading cause of death in Canada, but it鈥檚 older people who are dying. That we accept this and carry on as if the pandemic is over reveals our ageism: We don鈥檛 value older people.
oldpatientcovid-19
COVID-19 is still with us, and is still causing serious illness and death. However, it is disproportionately affecting older people.

Three years into this pandemic, most Canadians have taken off their masks and many have stopped getting booster shots. However, COVID-19 is rising among the in Canada, .

This is the first time an infectious disease has pushed its way into the top five causes of death during the .

Older adults account for most of those deaths, and we are letting it happen.

COVID-19, aging and ageism

COVID is a , but we are not using vaccines as well as we could. Most Canadians don’t understand the importance of booster shots in , such as long COVID. Even fewer recognize that getting vaccinated , including older adults.

Most COVID deaths are in older people. That’s not just a problem for them. It’s a problem for everyone. When older adults are healthy they are an incredible asset to our communities — they are , and . When they are unwell it is a on them, their caregivers and .

, after childbirth. Among those over 50, it is the single leading cause of hospitalization.

We had than we had in .

COVID is not over, but we are acting like it is. Many COVID research programs are . Can you imagine winding down research into any other condition on the top five mortality list?

The reason for not doing more to prevent COVID-19 appears to be ageism, plain and simple. There is no logical explanation for accepting an unnatural degree of hospitalization and premature deaths in elders except that we value the lives of younger people more.

The toll of COVID-19 in older people

Unfortunately, dying isn’t even necessarily the worst of it.

It’s just the part that’s easier to count and that makes the most headlines. There is still a sea of suffering out there, as older people — who are more likely to have other health issues — get sick with COVID and take a long time to recover, if they do recover.

For older adults, respiratory illness is often a , triggering a spiral that ends in premature death. Illness also causes many people to .

Canada had the of any country in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, because we did not prioritize preventing infectious disease. Now, because of the demographic bulge of the Baby Boom, the , even as COVID outbreaks continue in such facilities.

It’s hard to believe that after the in so many Canadian long-term care homes during early months of COVID that we have slipped back into complacency, allowing Canadians’ parents, grandparents, neighbours and friends to become infected because the rest of us won’t take simple actions.

It doesn’t have to be this way, and it shouldn’t.

Excess COVID-19 deaths in older adults are not inevitable

Typically, people under 50 are likely to have much more social contact through school, social events and work, making them the most likely to be exposed to the virus. However, they are also the least likely to protect themselves — and others — by keeping up with their and .

It may be easier for them to believe and behave as if the threat of COVID has passed, because they are far from COVID. But they are also the ones and far less choice.

We shouldn’t treat COVID-19 in older adults as inevitable. With better testing, policy makers could have better information to make decisions about how to reduce the number of infections. If more Canadians kept up with their vaccines, there could be less COVID-19 in the community and vulnerable populations would be better protected.

Older adults have inherent value and dignity, and are an asset to their communities. They are people who have already contributed to society in family, professional and social capacities, and who continue to do so. They deserve to live as long and as well as possible.

The Conversation

Dawn ME Bowdish receives funding from the COVID-19 Immunity Task Force (Public Health Agency of Canada) for her research on COVID-19 infections and vaccinations in older adults. She is on the Board of Directors of the Lung Health Foundation.

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