Uncategorized Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation http://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/category/uncategorized/ Mon, 15 Dec 2025 22:03:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-Favicon-32x32.jpg Uncategorized Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation http://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/category/uncategorized/ 32 32 This Influenza Season Will Feel a Little Different https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/this-influenza-season-will-feel-a-little-different/ Mon, 15 Dec 2025 21:53:51 +0000 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/?p=4420 There’s been a lot of talk in the news about this year’s influenza season. Collaborating with our partners in public health, we are here to share the most accurate information to keep your families and loved ones safe. One of our incredible partners is BCCDC’s Dr Danuta Skowronski, recognized for her notable contributions to the…

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There’s been a lot of talk in the news about this year’s influenza season. Collaborating with our partners in public health, we are here to share the most accurate information to keep your families and loved ones safe. One of our incredible partners is BCCDC’s Dr Danuta Skowronski, recognized for her notable contributions to the public health responses around several major health events such as SARS, avian influenza, the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, COVID-19 and enterovirus D68, and for providing regular expert guidance around seasonal influenza.

While influenza seasons are notoriously difficult to predict, Dr Skowronski has given us all the latest information about the 25/26 influenza season. This includes a new variant of influenza A(H3N2) called subclade K and what we can do to keep our communities safe, and in the know.

Looking to the South for Clues about the Flu Season

Although many factors are involved when trying to understand how the Northern Hemisphere’s influenza season may play out, researchers consider which viruses have emerged during the Southern Hemisphere’s preceding season. This year during the Southern Hemisphere’s 2025 influenza season, the subclade K variant arose, and is projected to dominate during the Northern Hemisphere’s 25/26 season. For the 25/26 season in Northern America, the World Health Organization (WHO) had already chosen the vaccine, and this choice does not reflect the more recent subclade K variant, making the vaccine ‘mismatched.’

What does this mean? If vaccines are mismatched, they may not be as effective. Additionally, H3N2 epidemics are normally associated with worse influenza seasons, and vaccine effectiveness is typically lower for H3N2. Mismatched vaccines still provide some protection, especially from severe cases of influenza that require hospitalization. But, if the vaccine is less effective, subclade K may result in more severe events overall.

It is important to note that the influenza vaccine targets three influenza strains, including A(H1N1), influenza B, and influenza A(H3N2). Ultimately, despite the H3N2 mismatch, it is still important for people to receive their influenza vaccine, because it does still offer some protection. This is especially important for people at high risk, like older adults, or people with chronic medical conditions.

Surveillance is Key

The USA normally provides Canada with strong indicators about what the North American influenza season will look like, but the US Centers for Disease Control paused its standard weekly respiratory illness reporting as we entered the 25/26 season (although reporting has resumed now in the US). Dr Skowronski and her team continually monitored developments throughout the summer and early fall, enabling them to be among the first to alert about subclade K. The team also tracked data from the United Kingdom (UK) and Japan where the influenza season got off to an early and intense start — especially affecting children — with the H3N2 subclade K comprising 90% of flu samples. As of December 5, surveillance indicators show the seasonal influenza epidemic has also begun in Canada and BC, with a sharp rise in influenza activity over the past few weeks.

The Importance of Vaccine Effectiveness Monitoring

The influenza vaccine is still expected to provide cross-protection against mismatched variants. Knowing how much protection, however, requires real time measurement. Dr Skowronski’s Canadian Sentinel Practitioner Surveillance Network (SPSN) for Influenza Virus and Vaccine Effectiveness (VE) Monitoring (an initiative the Foundation is proud to support) is crucial to determine how much protection influenza vaccines provide each year. ‎This enhanced molecular and epidemiological surveillance is used to address gaps in knowledge on vaccine-virus relatedness and will provide valid and timely VE findings, to inform further communications and public health guidance. Ultimately, this information will arm public health leaders to mitigate the impact of influenza this season, and will help improve understanding about influenza vaccines and programs in the future.

Staying Healthy during this Influenza Season

The vaccine remains the most important way to protect yourself, your friends, and family from influenza.

“Even in seasons when vaccine effectiveness is lower, the vaccine still provides some protection and is the best thing you can do to reduce your risk of severe illness.”

Joshua Petrie, PhD, MPH, associate research scientist at Wisconsin’s Marshfield Clinic Research Institute

In addition, you can reduce the risk of getting and spreading the flu by:

  • Staying home when sick, especially if symptoms include fever, cough and/or sneezing
  • Wearing a well-fitting respirator or mask if you have symptoms and must be around others, in a public setting, or seeking medical care
  • Washing your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds
  • If you can’t wash your hands, use a hand sanitizer containing at least 60% alcohol and rub your hands together for 20 seconds or until dry
  • Coughing and sneezing into a tissue or your elbow instead of your hand
  • Avoiding touching your eyes, nose or mouth with unclean hands
  • Cleaning and disinfecting surfaces and objects regularly that are often touched by others

We hope this information will help keep communities in our province, and beyond, healthy during this holiday season. To register yourself or someone else for a flu vaccine, book online or by phone through BC’s “Get Vaccinated” program.

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Vaccine effectiveness research directly impacts the health and wellness of our communities. Please donate to support vital work like this.

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A Family Affair: Supporting Public Health at the Vancouver Half Marathon https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/a-family-affair-supporting-public-health-at-the-vancouver-half-marathon/ Thu, 12 Jun 2025 21:26:57 +0000 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/?p=3544 ​​​​​​​​​​Like many things in their lives, 10-year-old Carter and 13-year-old Everley are participating in the Vancouver Half Marathon/5K Charity Challenge because their mom told them to. But that doesn't mean they're not excited about it! The annual event brings together many local charitable organizations, challenging each other to see who can raise the most money for their respective causes.

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​​​​​​​​​​Like many things in their lives, 10-year-old Carter and 13-year-old Everley are participating in the Vancouver Half Marathon/5K Charity Challenge because their mom told them to. But that doesn’t mean they’re not excited about it! The annual event brings together many local charitable organizations, challenging each other to see who can raise the most money for their respective causes.

Carter and Everley are looking forward to joining their mom ​​​​and her Pacific Public Health Foundation (PPHF) colleagues at the starting line on Sunday, June 22. Since mom started working with the Foundation a year ago, she’s been teaching them how important public health is for their well-being, and how fundraising events like this one support initiatives that help keep them healthy.

For Carter, a sports jack-of-all-trades, public health means putting on safety gear while he plays soccer, practices kickboxing and “shreds the gnar” on a skateboard. He was born with a lung condition and suffers from chronic asthma, so he really likes the work being done by Foundation partners to help find the root causes of asthma. He hopes it will help other kids, so they won’t need to use a daily inhaler or take frequent breaks during a track and field day, like he does.

Everley is a true equestrian at heart, and public health means wearing a helmet and safety vest while she rides Aladdin, her favourite horse, at the barn where she takes lessons. She will be going to high school this fall, and is well aware of the health risks associated with tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, and unregulated drugs—all ​made very clear to her by her teachers and parents! She also appreciates the youth mental health programs the Foundation supports. Knowing there are services available to help her and her friends if they need them will​ help smooth her transition from elementary to high school.

One of the family’s favourite public health activities is going for walks with their beloved dogs, Queenie and Bambi. While this 5K will be pup-free, the rest of the pack will be waiting at the finish line with lots of cheers and ice cream to celebrate their achievement!​​

​If you’re interested in joining Carter, Everley, and the Pacific Public Health Foundation team, you can register on the race roster website as an individual in support of the Foundation or create a team for your program or department. If you can’t join in person, you can register virtually or make a donation.

Every dollar counts and will go toward the Foundation’s 30+ active public health projects throughout BC, like research helping to prevent asthma in children, developing new tools to  tackle the toxic drug crisis, and addressing​ the impacts of climate change on equity-deserving populations.​ The team goal is $5000, and with the support of donors, partners, and friends, we know they may even surpass it!​

How far is 5 kilometres?

​​5 km is not as far as you think. And if you need some help getting ready for race day, check out the 10-week beginner 5K Training plan and the 10-week beginner Half Marathon Training plan.

Prizes will be awarded to the highest individual fundraiser and the team that raises the most money for Pacific Public Health Foundation. Share your participation and support on social media, and invite family and friends to join too! Don’t forget to tag us on InstagramFacebookLinkedIn and Bluesky.​

J​une 22 will be a beautiful da​y to kick off the summer, raise some money for public health, spend time with colleagues and maybe even make some new friends​​​​! Good luck to everyone who will be joining us, and thank you for your support.

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Support Public Health at the Vancouver Half Marathon & 5km! https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/support-public-health-at-the-vancouver-half-marathon-5km/ Wed, 14 May 2025 16:36:10 +0000 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/?p=3485 We know that much of the work done to support public health initiatives in BC goes unnoticed, and underfunded. As we've been telling our supporters, Public Health is Invisible.... when it's working. We don't feel the effects of the public health system until we are confronted with a natural disaster, a pandemic, a toxic drug…

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We know that much of the work done to support public health initiatives in BC goes unnoticed, and underfunded. As we’ve been telling our supporters, Public Health is Invisible…. when it’s working. We don’t feel the effects of the public health system until we are confronted with a natural disaster, a pandemic, a toxic drug poisoning crisis, and the list goes on. This is why we’ve decided to participate, as a team, in this year’s Vancouver Half Marathon: to shine the light on the importance of public health, and to raise money to help fund the public health initiatives that we know have a measurable impact on the lives of communities across our beautiful province.

What is the Vancouver Half?

The Vancouver Half Marathon Charity Challenge is an annual event, taking place this year on June 22, that brings charitable organizations together to challenge each other to raise the most money for their respective causes! Our team goal is $3000, but we know, with the support of our donors, partners, and friends, we can surpass it! Participants can choose between the 21K, 5K, and Kids Race.

We would love to see our public health colleagues, partners, supporters, and friends join our team and help us raise money public health projects that are creating a healthier, safer, and more equitable future for all!

If you want to join the run on June 22nd, register on the race website and select Pacific Public Health Foundation as your charity challenge team. If you cannot join in person, you can make a donation to help us reach our goal. Our team has a goal of raising $3000, and we are almost halfway there! Help bring us over the line, donate now!

Help us spread the word, share your participation on social media, and ask family and friends to support our fundraising goal! Don’t forget to tag us @pacificpublichealth on Instagram, Facebook & LinkedIn, and @pacpublichealth on Bluesky.

We hope that June 22 will be a beautiful day to kick off the summer and raise money for important public health initiatives, to see some friends, and make some new ones. See you at the starting line!

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Sexual Health is Part of Life. Why are we so Ashamed of it? https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/sexual-health-is-part-of-life-why-are-we-so-ashamed-of-it/ Mon, 10 Feb 2025 00:00:00 +0000 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/?p=3293 Sexual health, like physical and mental health, is an important part of life. We all make choices about our health that can lead to different consequences. Whether we eat too many fatty foods, smoke cigarettes, have more drinks than the recommended daily amount, or engage in unprotected sexual activity, we still deserve a public health…

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Sexual health, like physical and mental health, is an important part of life. We all make choices about our health that can lead to different consequences. Whether we eat too many fatty foods, smoke cigarettes, have more drinks than the recommended daily amount, or engage in unprotected sexual activity, we still deserve a public health system that can respond to the illnesses we face without bias, shame, or stigma. Why is it that when we are faced with discussing our sexuality and any medical issues that may arise from sexual activity, we often cringe and hide our faces in shame? Why are we letting our shame make us sick?

Follow along this week as we share educational resources about sexual health, talk about the power of listening to those with lived experience, discuss the access we need to create for those who need sexual health services, and consider how to change the way we think about sexual health, to influence better health outcomes in the future.

An Alarming Trend of STBBI Increases in Canada

Why is it that Canada is the only G7 country where HIV rates are increasing? Canada has seen an increase of over 35% in newly diagnosed HIV cases from 2022-2023, making it more difficult to meet the UN’s goal of eliminating HIV and other Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections (STBBI) as a health concern by 2030. According to Vancouver Coastal Health, rates of infectious syphilis in British Columbia have also been increasing over the last few years. In 2022, 1,964 infectious syphilis cases were reported in BC — the highest in the last 40 years. Rates of other forms of bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STI) like chlamydia and gonorrhea have risen rapidly in Canada, and rates of hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C (HVC) have not decreased in line with global targets. Alarmingly, the rate of congenital syphilis, a type of syphilis that can be passed from pregnant mother to fetus resulting in potential pregnancy loss or morbidity in newborns, increased 599% between 2018-2022.

What Factors are Influencing this Increase?

Certainly, access to testing and treatment is a barrier for many seeking care. The COVID-19 pandemic did not help matters, resulting in service reductions and less access to testing, screening and treatment of STBBI.

People living in rural and remote (RRI) communities have even less access to services where they can be diagnosed and treated. And that’s not taking into consideration those who cannot access online/remote services. For example, as of 2020, only 25% of Indigenous communities in BC have basic internet access. And what if a person seeking testing does not have housing, the identification needed to see a healthcare provider, or a phone number to be reached when the results are available? This is the case for some people in our province. Nicola Gale, a Clinical Pharmacist who works for Clinical Prevention Services at the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC), explains this problem further:

“As digital technology has become an integral tool for accessing healthcare, individuals without access to a cellphone are at a disadvantage when searching for health information, participating in telehealth, and following up with their healthcare providers. As a result, this divide in digital health equity has been recognized as a super social determinant of health that intersects with all other social determinants.”

The toxic drug poisoning crisis that was declared a public health emergency in BC in 2016 is also impacting STBBI rates. We have lost over 16,000 people to toxic drugs since the emergency was declared, and we know that the use of substances either through injection or inhalation increases the risk for people who use drugs (PWUD) of contracting STBBI.

These factors have contributed to an environment of increased STBBI in all parts of Canada, including BC. But they are also exacerbated by unnecessary shame and harmful stigma. Shame can actually increase one’s chance of contracting STBBI because those who feel they are at risk for these infections are embarrassed and/or stigmatized when accessing testing and treatment. Keeping sexual health a taboo subject leads to less conversation, communication, education, access, and poorer health outcomes.

Consider this:  If someone lives in a small town and the only way to obtain a STBBI test is through a doctor who treats many others they know, including friends and family members, perhaps that person would choose to ignore their concerns rather than face judgment. And that’s if there is a healthcare provider available when needed, as BC faces a primary care physician shortage. In many instances, there is no provision of culturally safe care, underscoring the inequities Indigenous People face when seeking testing and treatment.

Sexual Health Resources

One of the main roles of public health is to provide the resources necessary for people to make informed decisions about their health. To that end, we’ve curated some culturally safe and helpful information that can be used to learn more about sexual health:

  • The Smart Sex Resource, a website created by the BCCDC, offers great information for BC residents about all things sexual health, from finding a clinic, to an explanation of STIs, and even professional guidelines for health providers.
  • Undetectable = Untransmittable is a health promotion campaign that promotes the scientific fact that that HIV cannot be sexually transmitted when a person living with HIV is on treatment and the amount of HIV in their blood is very low (200 copies/ml). This campaign is very important to help combat the historic and continued stigma faced by those living with HIV.
  • Chee Mamuk, the Indigenous-led program within the BCCDC offers culturally appropriate resources and educational materials on STIs, HIV and hepatitis. 
  • The First Nations Health Authority (FNHA)’s STBBI web page offers resources created by and for Indigenous, two-spirit people, and their allies.
  • If you would like more information about the plan to treat hepatitis in our province, we helped fund a roadmap and knowledge products created by the BCCDC and the BC Hepatitis Network that outline how we can eliminate viral hepatitis as a public health threat in BC by 2030.

Information and education help combat shame and stigma. When we have the answers we need, we can make more informed decisions about our health.

Listening and Learning

Listening to those with lived experience is key when creating and implementing programs that will positively impact those who are being treated for, at risk of, or are living with STBBI. Listening also includes incorporating those with lived experience as peer navigators in different programs, helping others newly diagnosed with STBBI understand their care and treatment options, while providing a sense of community and connection.

Listening to the priorities of equity-deserving communities is what inspired Test, Link, Call (TLC), a project from the BCCDC that we are so proud to support. Here, Nicola Gale explains this project, created through community collaboration:

“(Test, Link, Call) was developed to help improve STBBI testing, treatment, and cure for people who use drugs, people experiencing unstable housing, and people with experiences of criminalization and incarceration. TLC incorporates a unique service delivery model that provides participants with a free cellphone, a 6-month unlimited talk and text phone plan, and support from a Peer Health Mentor (a person with lived experience) for system navigation and help connecting with a clinic….Working in frontline care myself, being involved in a project like TLC gives me hope that it’s possible for our systems to be reoriented towards addressing the needs of the community. This requires a crucial shift away from wondering why we can’t find the ‘hard to reach clients’ and instead refocusing instead on how to make our ‘hard to reach services’ better. Collaborations like these allow the medical community to benefit from the expertise of people with lived experience, and highlights how health and social care can be treated as not just separate spheres, but as one and the same.”

Listening to people from equity-deserving groups, who are at a higher risk for, or are living with STBBI, will always be important when planning programs that aim to provide services. Meeting people where they are at with non-judgmental care will help improve health and well-being in these populations in future.

Providing Access to Sexual Health Support Services

Providing more access to information, safe sex tools, testing, and treatment for groups at higher risk of STBBI is essential to stop the spread of illness, which is why we support a variety of programs that promote increased access to STBBI testing, treatment, and support for equity deserving groups.

Due to the historical and ongoing colonization, control, and oppression of Indigenous Peoples, Indigenous communities in Canada are a key population identified as disproportionately affected by STBBI. We are proud to work in partnership with Chee Mamuk, the Indigenous-led, self-determining program within the BCCDC, to help build trust and relationships with Indigenous communities through the gifting of Kloshe Nanitch medicine bundles. Originally co-designed with communities, these bundles support a full spectrum of Indigenous Peoples’ lived experience, and continue to evolve to reflect the current priorities of communities across the region. Some of the bundles include practical sexual health information and supplies, harm reduction tools, and resources to learn more. Importantly, these items are gifted in a culturally appropriate and respectful way. This critical work within communities promotes health and well-being, and builds relations, cooperation, and a new way of thinking that puts the emphasis on striving for better health, well-being, and inter-generational healing that helps to overcome the harms and inequities that have impacted Indigenous People. 

Another project created by our partners at the BCCDC is a great example of providing stigma free and convenient access to STI testing and care. GetCheckedOnline is a free online STI testing site. It is a private and easy way to get tested, currently available in 7 communities across the province. Users do not need a BC services card, and can create an account online with their contact information. A lab form is generated based on assessment questions, and the user can print the form and bring it to a participating lab location. After giving the sample at the lab, users get their test results via email, and if there is a need for follow-up, a nurse will be in touch. This program has been available for ten years, and the administrators hope to expand to more RRI communities in the future, and engage more actively with Indigenous populations.

Let’s Change the Way we Think and Talk About our Sexual Health

We hope this series on sexual health has been informative, maybe even sparking discussion with your healthcare providers, family, friends, and partners, and motivating you to make sexual health a priority in your life. By simply talking about sexual health and STBBI as a normal part of healthcare — like Diabetes, Cancer, or seasonal flu — we can all help to eliminate the shame and stigma associated with these infections, and hopefully lead to more people getting tested and treated in the future.

Everyone experiences health challenges in life, and we all deserve non-judgmental, accessible, and stigma-free care. People living with STBBI are no different. We are committed to funding different projects that increase access to STBBI programs for equity-deserving communities, meeting people where they are at so that everyone can receive the care they need and deserve. Please join us in supporting STBBI care in BC by donating to help fund important initiatives like these.

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*We would like to thank Dr Troy Grennan, Physician Lead for the Provincial HIV/STI Program at BCCDC, and Dr Muhammad Morshed, Clinical Microbiologist and Program Head of Zoonotic Diseases, Emerging Pathogens and Parasitology at the BCCDC Laboratory, for their help providing background information for this series.

Join the conversation and help us shake the stigma around sexual health. Find us on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Bluesky.

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