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Wednesday, January 12, 2022

After Quebec’s top doctor resigns, critics say replacement should be more independent - Globalnews.ca

Quebec’s three main opposition parties and the province’s college of physicians are calling for the next public health director to be more independent from Premier François Legault.

Dr. Horacio Arruda resigned as public health director on Monday, after the Quebec government faced weeks of criticism from the opposition and pundits for its handling of the latest wave of COVID-19.

Quebec’s health-care system is under enormous stress from the rapidly rising number of COVID-19 patients, and the latest restrictions — including a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew — are some of the most strict in the country.

Read more: Quebec’s public health director Horacio Arruda resigns amid latest COVID-19 wave

The opposition has said Arruda, who usually appeared in public alongside Health Minister Christian Dubé and Legault and whose advice to the government was often delivered orally behind closed doors, was too close to political decision makers.

Click to play video: 'Legault thanks public health director Arruda for work after resignation' Legault thanks public health director Arruda for work after resignation
Legault thanks public health director Arruda for work after resignation

Québec solidaire issued a statement on Tuesday calling for the government to include opposition parties in the process to name Arruda’s replacement. The Parti Québécois said Tuesday that the recommendations of the next public health director should be made public.

“The last 22 months have shown us collectively how important it is for Quebec to have an independent public health director who can manage the crisis while keeping an arm’s length distance from government decisions,” Québec solidaire said in a news release.

Read more: Quebec to impose a tax on people who are unvaccinated from COVID-19

That position was echoed by the College des médecins du Quebec, which said on Twitter Tuesday that Quebecers would be more likely to follow public health directives if the office of the public director was more independent from elected officials.

Opposition Leader Dominique Anglade, however, said she didn’t expect anything to change when Arruda is replaced.

“The departure of Dr. Arruda won’t resolve anything,” she wrote on Twitter Monday. “The decisions are made by the premier and should be based on science and not on polls and his intuition.”

Legault held a news conference in Montreal at 1 p.m. Tuesday, where he introduced Arruda’s temporary replacement, Dr. Luc Boileau, the head of a government health-care research institution called the Institut national d’excellence en sante et services sociaux.

Read more: COVID-19: Quebec tops 12,000 deaths as hospitalizations also see another steep increase

Earlier Tuesday, Quebec reported 62 more deaths attributed to the novel coronavirus, pushing the total number of people killed by COVID-19 in the province to 12,028, the most in Canada.

The Health Department said COVID-19-related hospitalizations rose by 188, to 2,742, after 433 people were admitted to hospital in the previous 24 hours and 245 were discharged. The number of people in intensive care rose by seven, to 255.

Quebec reported 8,710 new cases of COVID-19 Tuesday, which were the result of more than 51,000 tests, 20 per cent of which came back positive.

© 2022 The Canadian Press

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After Quebec’s top doctor resigns, critics say replacement should be more independent - Globalnews.ca
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