Security, health experts to lead review of pandemic warning system
OTTAWA — Health Minister Patty Hajdu is tapping a former national security adviser to lead a probe into whether Canada’s pandemic warning system fell down just before COVID-19 reared up.
Margaret Bloodworth will chair a three-member review panel studying what went wrong with the Global Public Health Intelligence Network.
She will be joined by former deputy public health officer Dr. Paul Gully, and Mylaine Breton, Canada Research Chair in Clinical Governance on Primary Health Care at Université de Sherbrooke in Quebec.
The network, known commonly as GPHIN, was created more than two decades ago and helped flag both the SARS pandemic in 2003, and H1N1 in 2009, before either really exploded.