Stay home until this聽is聽under control
My wife and I have followed all the recommended guidelines for more than a year now. We wear masks, stay the recommended distance and so on.
Haven鈥檛 hugged a grandchild for over a year. We get our exercise by walking and we golf following all the rules making sure we keep a good distance from other players.
I was so dismayed when we were paired off with a young couple from 颅Calgary who said they were on a 鈥渞oad trip.鈥
I feel that our whole year of being so cautious may have been put in jeopardy. What is the sense of preaching to the residents of B.C. to stay home, don鈥檛 travel and be safe if others don鈥檛 have to follow the same practice?
It鈥檚 time to preach and mandate that to other 91原创s to stay home until this pandemic is under control.
Walter Hill
Victoria
Better medical care with in-person visits
Thank you to the concerned Victoria emergency physicians for their lucid, coherent accounting of their perceived abuses of telemedicine and its inherent inadequacies.
Please allow me to expound further on the fast fading concept of direct patient care. That is, 鈥減erson to person鈥 inquiry and 鈥渓aying on of hands鈥.
There is no question that many 鈥渋nvestigative techniques (x-ray, ultrasound, C.T., MRI, PET and so on) have become beneficial 鈥渁djuncts鈥 (some would say necessary) to patient care.
All these techniques, including 颅telemedicine, are however merely our attempts to 鈥渧isualize reality鈥 from a distance. We still need, however, the 鈥渞eal thing.鈥 A living, breathing, pulsating body in our headlights!
A picture, in this instance, is not worth a thousand words, but less!
Ron Irish, retired MD
North Saanich
The reason behind telemedicine usage
The problem is simple: There are not enough doctors in Victoria who want to see you. They want everything done on the phone or computer. To be physically examined you have to go to the emergency department.
Sixty per cent of Victorians do not have a family doctor. Why? Someone explain that to me. I haven鈥檛 had one for 11 years.
Kate Sarginson
Victoria
Enforcement needed to stop non-essential travel
As the vaccine roll-out increases, we see an increase in COVID-19 cases.
This non-intuitive phenomenon has been experienced by other countries: significant decreases in case counts do not occur until close to reaching herd immunity.
This is not due to any shortcoming in the vaccines but rather to human psychology: people think that it has become safer to carry out activities hitherto restricted, especially travel. Even before human understanding of the causes of diseases, plague ships have been turned away from ports for centuries.
The B.C. provincial government has not enforced the rule against non-essential travel, even encouraging it by adding extra ferries on the Easter weekend.
Once everyone in the province has been given the opportunity to be vaccinated, the government should introduce a vaccine passport to allow only those vaccinated to travel.
Kenneth Mintz
Victoria
Hospital is people, it鈥檚聽not the building
I am writing in defence of the Cowichan District Hospital, which was described in a recent article as a failure, particularly regarding the Indigenous community in that they are not treated in the same way as others.
The new hospital would 鈥渃hange that鈥 and could then be regarded as 鈥渙ur hospital.鈥
I worked for 35 years as a consultant physician, now retired, at CDH and feel a great injustice has been done to first responders, nurses, doctors, technicians and hospital workers.
The portal of entry to the hospital and the 鈥済o to place鈥 is the emergency department, and it is particularly challenging with acutely ill and stressed patients and staff trying to evaluate and treat their urgent needs.
A hospital is not a building, but the people that work in it. Change will only occur when the staff-to-patient ratios are improved.
Try a 12-hour shift on a long weekend in the emergency department and you will know.
A.J. Turner, retired MD
Cowichan
Wearing a mask in simple terms
Wearing a mask is like 鈥渘ot鈥 swearing in front of your grandparents. Do it so you don鈥檛 hurt someone.
Bill Carere
Victoria
A perfect spot for maritime museum
We need something important that can re-unite us with our city, the city we used to love. The Gold Rush warehouses could be turned into a spectacular maritime museum.
We could host an architectural competition, judged by the public. Perhaps the museum could issue bonds to raise some of the needed monies. Somewhere out there is a person with a vision of what these dear old buildings might become.
We don鈥檛 need any more waterfront condos, no high rises. Let us preserve and enhance what we already have, and thereby enrich our city, and our heritage.
Sabine Orlik
Victoria
In defence of Saanich聽chickens
I read with dismay the letter suggesting backyard chickens should be banned in Saanich. Following this logic no one should be able to have cats and dogs because some people mistreat them.
Also no one should be able to ride a bike or drive a car because some people do so dangerously.
I say, deal with the person who is mistreating his or her chickens, ban them from owning more, and leave the rest of us with happy, clean, quiet chickens alone.
Having seen the conditions on a local chicken farm I know ours are having a much superior life. My only issue is how to dispatch them humanely when they get too old to lay.
Sheila Ruffell
Saanich
鈥楽nail mail鈥 hurtful to postal workers
A recent commentary twice used the term 鈥渟nail mail.鈥
That term is hurtful to thousands of good people who work for Canada Post. I recommend that the Times 91原创 stop using that term and use 鈥減ostal mail鈥 instead.
I recommend that the TC outlaw 鈥渟nail mail鈥 completely and permanently.
David Stocks
Saanich
Transparency needed during the pandemic
Oak Bay council鈥檚 efforts to ensure 鈥渇airness鈥 in the marina lease renewal process have shut down reasonable discussion and diminished transparency.
When asked to discuss the matter, one councillor responded that since a request for proposals was active, he couldn鈥檛 provide information, but that he hoped to be able to provide information and clarity soon.
From this I deduce the agenda-less special in camera meeting on March 31 was in fact a review of the marina lease proposals.
However, only after a meeting on the topic would the representative feel free to engage in discussing it. This is discouraging and counterproductive.
Good public decisions arise from broad consultations. Diversity helps. And invariably the time taken to develop consensus is well spent.
Counterintuitively, striving to get the task done quickly to meet a deadline before the public complicates matters frequently results in backtracking, further delay, and disengagement of the citizenry. (In public life, pragmatism doesn鈥檛 work, as the Clover Point fiasco demonstrates.)
During a pandemic, extra efforts to engage citizens are essential. Special means to ensure broad public participation must be devised. Restricting input in the name of fairness must not result in poorer decisions and reduced transparency.
Gordon Alexander
Oak Bay
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鈥 Mail: Letters to the editor, Times 91原创, 201-655 Tyee Rd., Victoria, B.C. V9A 6X5
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