Canada has approximately 10% more of its population partially or fully vaccinated than the US, but the primary differentiator appears to be Canada's public healthcare system. That means people have better access to good healthcare and are less likely to be sicker when they were or are infected with Covid and thus have a much better chance of recovery. JL
Bernd Debusmann reports in the BBC:
80% of Canada's population was fully immunised against Covid-19, along with another 5% partially vaccinated. In the US, 64% of people are fully vaccinated and 12% partially vaccinated. 34% of the US death toll has come in the 7 months since (vaccines), while only 26% of Canada's have. (Most importantly), unlike the US, Canada has a universal, decentralised and publicly funded healthcare system.The availability of universal health insurance is the "simplest" explanation for Canada's lower infections and deaths. "People, regardless of socioeconomic status, have access to healthcare."What started as a trucker-led movement to demand the end of a vaccine mandate has escalated to include all kinds of public health restrictions.
But since the pandemic began, Canada has fared far better than the US, despite similar income disparities, territorial divides, and comorbidities such as obesity and hypertension as its southern neighbour.
There is a staggering difference, for example, in how many more Americans have died because of Covid compared to Canadians, both in absolute numbers and as the ratio of deaths per million inhabitants.
So what is going on, and why might Canada's experience be different to that of the US so far? And amid mounting public pressure to relax restrictions, will Canada be able to keep a lid on the pandemic going forward?
What do the numbers show?
The proportion of daily new confirmed Covid cases has been lower in Canada than the US throughout most of the pandemic.
As of 12 February - and even with infection rates falling across the country - new cases in the US stood at about 543 per million people, compared with 258 in Canada, according to Our World in Data, a collaboration between Oxford University and an educational charity.
The trajectory of the pandemic has been similar in both countries, with cases rising and falling at roughly the same time, with the notable exception of the second US surge in the summer of 2021.
"In fact, the reproduction rate of the virus has been exactly the same," said Canadian national Dr Mark Cameron, an associate professor in the department of population and quantitative health sciences at Case Western University in Ohio. "[But] Canada's per capita case rate has generally been less than half that of the US".
The total death toll of the pandemic in the US stands at about 919,000, compared to 35,500 in Canada, according to Johns Hopkins University.
While the population of the US - over 332.4 million - is more than eight times Canada's 38.2 million, its ratio of deaths per million inhabitants still far surpasses Canada's.
Another set of statistics compiled by Johns Hopkins shows that as of 11 February, 279 US residents have died of Covid per 100,000, compared to about 94 in Canada.
Vaccination rates and healthcare differences
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