The good and bad consequences of school closures amid a disease outbreak
TORONTO — From school closures to travel restrictions to limits on large gatherings, Canada entered a new stage in combating the spread of COVID-19 this week with measures that various experts say will almost certainly have unintended consequences.
School closures in particular have come under scrutiny for their ability to adequately mitigate infection if millions of children are now in the community, many with less supervision and some possibly in the care of elderly grandparents who are at greater risk of complications from the emerging disease.
“There’re always going to be those scenarios where there’s unintended consequences, where people are harmed as a result of isolation or stopping everything, but these kind of measures are done on a population level,” says infection disease physician Alon Vaisman, a doctor at Toronto General Hospital.
“For sure there are going to be individuals where it is worse for them but, you know, we look at cases in Italy and in (China’s) Hubei (province) of what they did — it was a blunt tool to try to reduce the spread as fast as you can.”