population health Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation Wed, 14 Feb 2024 23:18:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-Favicon-32x32.jpg population health Archives | Pacific Public Health Foundation 32 32 New Pandemic Recovery Projects Helping BC Advance Equity and Community Resiliency https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/new-pandemic-recovery-projects-helping-bc-advance-equity-and-community-resiliency/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 21:24:53 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/new-pandemic-recovery-projects-helping-bc-advance-equity-and-community-resiliency/ We've been hard at work supporting pandemic recovery in our province. In this blog post, learn about some impactful projects we're working on to advance equity and community resiliency in BC.

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While the last few years have been difficult, and we are all ready to move forward, the pandemic is not over. In January 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) determined that the pandemic remains a public health emergency of international concern, indicating that we are at a transition point—SARS-CoV-2 remains a risk to health, and variants of concern are still with us. Just over a year ago, we were in the midst of the highly contagious Omicron wave, and its sub-variants continue to emerge (e.g., XBB.1.5).

Though it may feel different, as we are learning to live with SARS-CoV-2 as a circulating respiratory virus, we must understand that there remains a global health emergency of which we cannot become complacent. We must still protect those who have been made more vulnerable due to the pandemic, and we must also focus, for example, on long-term data collection for vaccine effectiveness, advancing vaccine equity, and applying lessons from the current pandemic to future threat responses.

Our work, therefore, continues.

The SPEAK Surveys data are critically important to help us understand where to focus our efforts. To date, data show negative impacts on mental health and stress and that societal impacts are inequitably distributed, with families with children, young adults, and people from lower socioeconomic backgrounds most impacted. Taking this into consideration, much of the work of public health is shifting from acute, and often real-time, response, to strategic, proactive recovery and addressing the societal consequences of the pandemic and pandemic-related measures, as well as applying lessons to help us prepare for the future. These efforts will take years.

What does this mean for us?

It means we’re actively listening, learning, engaging, and convening work to advance equity, community resiliency, the social determinants of health, and a stronger, innovative public health sector. Here’s a snapshot of some of our current solutions-focused projects and priorities, as we shift towards the future.

  • As BC shifts towards pandemic recovery, there is a limited window of opportunity to learn from the experiences of those engaged in the pandemic response and identify areas for improvement to prepare for emerging pathogens and future pandemics. It is critical to learn from the public health experience of the pandemic in order to prepare for the future. We’re funding a project that aims to articulate learnings to inform a provincial pandemic preparedness and response guidance framework, which will ensure BC is ready for future threats.
  • Working with Michael Smith Health Research BC, the Simon Fraser University Faculty of Health Sciences, and the Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue, we convened a dialogue event to distill key lessons, strengthen partnerships among public health and research stakeholders, and identify structures and mechanisms to support evidence-based practice, policy, and decision-making, as well as community-relevant public health messaging and tools.
  • We continue to fund key areas of immunization research and service, with a specific focus on advancing equity for Indigenous communities. This includes vaccine monitoring, reporting, access, and stewardship in the North to strengthen these areas to ensure that Indigenous communities receive the same access to, and supports for, vaccination.
  • Evidence of Indigenous-specific racism in the health system surfaced in powerful ways during the pandemic. We’re supporting a project that will systematically look at the ways in which Indigenous-specific racism, white supremacy, and settler colonialism showed up within the public health response.
  • Addressing the societal, or unintended, consequences of the pandemic and pandemic-related measures is critical to rebuilding, recovery, and resiliency. Working with the Ministry of Health and the BC Centre for Disease Control, we’re providing grants across the province focusing on equity in regional health authorities and local communities.
  • One fundamental consequence of the pandemic is that youth mental health and wellbeing has been negatively impacted—data from the SPEAK surveys have demonstrated that this must be a core area of work for public health. We’re supporting provincial research to understand the needs and gaps, and build and strengthen interventions for youth.

We look forward to sharing outcomes of these and other projects in future stories and as we advance our new strategic plan to help shape public health over the coming years by focusing on equity, partnerships, innovation, and social justice, anti-racism, and truth and reconciliation. 

Together… a constant theme

In early 2020, our Executive Director wrote her first reflections blog, followed by a second reflections piece in early 2022—the theme of both was ‘together.’

In 2023, ‘together’ remains a core theme.

Much of what we are learning and hearing is that public health needs to do a better job of incorporating your voices. The SPEAK Surveys are a vital tool, and one example. Public engagement is important to us, as it brings us together and ensures public health is working for you.

Our work has been, and will continue to be, accomplished together through collaboration and partnerships. This also means our donor community and we’re continuing to advance efforts through Your Health, Our Commitment — a way for you to get involved and help too—gifts to Your Health, Our Commitment will advance the projects above and other critical initiatives.

National COVID-19 Awareness Day was March 11th, to commemorate the day the WHO declared a global pandemic in 2020, offering a day to both remember and to look ahead, and bring people and communities together. As we focus on learning from the pandemic, supporting recovery efforts, and addressing the societal consequences, let’s not forget we still have work to do, together. 


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Newsletter #37: November 2022 https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/newsletter-37-november-2022/ Thu, 24 Nov 2022 19:21:22 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/newsletter-37-november-2022/ We're excited to announce the launch of our new campaign! Plus, this Giving Tuesday, a generous donor is matching all gifts up to $5,000! Click over to read more in our November newsletter.

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Your Health, Our Commitment: Our New Campaign to Support Pandemic Recovery, Strengthen Public Health, and Build Resilient Communities For All https://pacificpublichealth.ca/whats-new/your-health-our-commitment-our-new-campaign-to-support-pandemic-recovery-strengthen-public-health-and-build-resilient-communities-for-all/ Tue, 22 Nov 2022 15:24:26 +0000 https://bccdcfound.wpengine.com/whats-new/your-health-our-commitment-our-new-campaign-to-support-pandemic-recovery-strengthen-public-health-and-build-resilient-communities-for-all/ Our new campaign "Your Health, Our Commitment" is a call to move beyond pandemic response towards a brighter, more equitable future for all. Click over to learn more, and how you can support this important campaign.

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No matter who we are, where we live, or how we live, we believe that everyone deserves good health. While we’ve all been touched by the pandemic, some of us have been more affected than others.

We know that the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have not been equally distributed; older and younger adults have been disproportionately impacted, as well as people who already experience health inequities, intersecting inequities, and broader systemic inequities.

The pandemic has had vast and lasting impacts on us all and it has greatly exacerbated existing inequities for those already made vulnerable due to systemic barriers. It has shown us where we need to provide better, stronger public health solutions. We have much work to do to recover and address the societal consequences of the pandemic, and protect everyone in BC as we begin to live safely and thoughtfully with the current state.

We are committed to prioritizing BC’s recovery, addressing the societal consequences of the pandemic, and supporting BC through this next phase through our newest campaign, Your Health, Our Commitment.

Since February 2020, we’re proud to be playing an important role in supporting BC’s COVID-19 public health response. Over the past few years, thanks to our donors and partners, we’re supporting: population health monitoring critical for decision-making that is grounded in experiences; vaccine research, including vaccine effectiveness and helping to build vaccine confidence; key tools such as wastewater testing; and much more.

From understanding how the virus mutates and spreads, to the rapid development of novel vaccines, we’ve learned so much about the science of COVID-19, and we’re in a much different place than we were a few years ago. At the same time, we’ve also learned quite a bit about the societal aspects of the pandemic as well.

Just as we were able to come together in early 2020 in response to the pandemic, it’s time to mobilize again to rebuild, reimagine, and recover. Together, we can design a stronger, healthier, more equitable future. This is our commitment to your health.

Through Your Health, Our Commitment, we will keep working with our partners and donors to support BC in preparing for, and responding to, threats to the health of our communities now and into the future.

You can be a part of this next phase, too. By donating to Your Health, Our Commitment, you join a community of donors, public health organizations, government, academics, health practitioners, and other funders to foster healthy communities and strengthen our responses for the future.

A gift to Your Health, Our Commitment will:

  • support research and people;
  • address the long-term negative societal and health impacts of the pandemic;
  • provide critical public health solutions for capacities and infrastructure;
  • translate knowledge to action in practice and policy;
  • bolster collaboration across the public health sector;
  • mobilize evidence-based information to increase public knowledge; and
  • enable us to direct funding in a responsive, and nimble way as we continue to deal with the flux of our times.

We invite you to join us with a donation to Your Health, Our Commitment and help us support pandemic recovery, strengthen public health, and build resilient communities for all.


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