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Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd (Ontario) T.AEM

Alternate Symbol(s):  AEM

Agnico Eagle Mines Limited is a Canada-based gold mining company, which is engaged in producing precious metals from operations in Canada, Australia, Finland and Mexico. The Company has a pipeline of exploration and development projects in these countries as well as in the United States. Its operations include Canadian Malartic Complex, Detour Lake, Fosterville, Goldex, Kittila, La India, LaRonde Complex, Macassa, Meadowbank Complex, Meliadine and Pinos Altos. Its exploration site includes Anza, Barsele, Delta, Douay/Joutel, Kirkland Lake Regional, Kuotko, Monument Bay and others. The Canadian Malartic Complex is located over 25 kilometers (km) west of Val-d’Or in northwestern Quebec, Canada. The Detour Lake operation is located in northeastern Ontario, over 300 km northeast of Timmins and 185 km by road northeast of Cochrane, within the northernmost Abitibi Greenstone Belt. The Fosterville mine is a high-grade, low-cost underground gold mine, located 20 km from the city of Bendigo.


TSX:AEM - Post by User

Comment by Quintessential1on Jan 28, 2023 9:22am
183 Views
Post# 35251710

RE:A Memory Jog: KL

RE:A Memory Jog: KL$300 M  well spent IMO.

GLTA


Dibah420 wrote: Reminded me of the self styled "expert" who used to spew anti-vaxx nonsense on the old Kirkland Lake board before KL was acquired by AEM.

Did COVID-19 misinformation cost the lives of 2,800 Canadians?

A Canadian organization is behind an unprecedented use of modelling that has illustrated for the first time the disturbing cost of misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic

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OTTAWA—A year ago this week, protest signs for the so-called “Freedom Convoy” started popping up around downtown Ottawa, hoisted into the air on hockey sticks and plastered against the sides of trucks:

“God’s given immunity works best.”

“They’ve been lying so stop complying.”

 
 

“We are not lab rats.”

They were the product of threads of misinformation planted in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, which falsely claimed that governments and media were lying about the severity of the public health crisis and the safety of vaccines meant to protect Canadians from the worst of its wrath.

Now, a Canadian organization is behind an unprecedented use of modelling that has illustrated the disturbing cost of those narratives.

According to a report released Thursday from the Council of Canadian Academies (CCA), researchers found that between March and November 2021, misinformation contributed to vaccine hesitancy for an estimated 2.35 million people in Canada.

The Cost of COVID-19 misinformation

Between March and November 2021, misinformation contributed to vaccine hesitancy for an estimated 2.35 million Canadians, according to modelling by the Council of Canadian Academies. If those who believed COVID-19 was a hoax or exaggerated had not delayed or refused vaccination, by the end of November 2021, there could have been...

198,000

fewer COVID-19 cases

13,000

fewer hospitalizations

3,500

fewer ICU patients

2,800

fewer deaths

$299 million

saved in hospital costs

SOURCE: COUNCIL OF CANADIAN ACADEMIES

 

Based on the modelling, if those who believed the pandemic was a hoax or exaggerated had not delayed or refused vaccination, then by the end of that time frame, there could have been:

  • about 198,000 fewer COVID-19 cases;
  • an estimated 13,000 fewer hospitalizations;
  • approximately 2,800 fewer deaths;
  • nearly $300 million saved in hospital costs.

“It does seem that misinformation has become a defining issue of our age,” said Alex Himelfarb, a former clerk of the Privy Council and chair of the expert panel that produced the report, entitled “Fault Lines.”

The panel was tasked by Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada to answer the question: “What are the socioeconomic impacts of science and health misinformation on the public and public policy in Canada?”

The CCA convened 13 experts to create the report, drawing on people in fields such as public policy, science communication and economics. It defined misinformation as false information that is “inadvertently shared,” and disinformation as something that is “deliberately created or shared.”

The panel used what’s known as an “agent-based” model in collaboration with a team at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to “simulate” the behaviour of Canadians in 2021.

The model looked at whether people believed that COVID-19 was a hoax or thought that perceived vaccine harms had been “covered up,” according to the best available polling data.

Running on the evidence-based assumption that those beliefs would contribute to vaccine hesitancy, the panel examined various hypothetical scenarios about what might have happened if those groups, and the entire Canadian population at large, were vaccinated as soon as shots became available to them. Using a baseline model of real data regarding vaccination levels, case counts, deaths, hospitalizations and intensive care admissions, researchers were able to estimate the impact of misinformation.

The published estimates are conservative; they only account for a nine-month period during the pandemic, and don’t include other factors such as the impact of long COVID and outcomes associated with delaying surgeries and other procedures.

“Agent-based models like this have been used for other purposes, but this is a breakthrough. It’s an original contribution,” Himelfarb told reporters.

 

It’s the sort of data NDP MP Charlie Angus has been waiting for.

“These numbers are really concerning. They show us that misinformation has real-life consequences,” Angus told the Star. “I mean, more people died according to disinformation than (people who) die in car accidents every year in Canada.”

The Ontario MP has taken part in parliamentary proceedings in Canada and the United Kingdom on the threats posed by digital disinformation, and has spoken out about how unprepared Canada was to face the explosion of inaccurate information that surfaced during the pandemic and the ensuing “freedom” movement.

He said that while elected officials in Canada presented a unified front at the onset of the pandemic, some began to “pander to the fear” wrought by the crisis.

 

“It not only amplified the disinformation but it embedded it in political discourse in this country, and it made all sorts of disinformation a legitimate part of what has become very, very toxic politics in our country,” Angus said. “That’s going to be … very hard to walk back.”

Indeed, the CCA report cited data that has shown “politician” to be one of the most “untrustworthy” professions in the country, and discussed how beliefs in COVID-19 conspiracy theories are highest among those who do not trust the government and mainstream media.

Raisa Patel is an Ottawa-based reporter covering federal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @R_SPatel
 
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Conversations are opinions of our readers and are subject to the Code of Conduct. The Star does not endorse these opinions.
 
 
 
 

All Comments

 
 
 
 
  1.  
     
     

    Back in June 2020 I went to the big vaccination event in downtown Toronto (over 30K vaccinated in one day). The line was long but proceeded quickly. Along the line were various anti-vax groups giving those in line dire warnings should they get vaccinated. They were ignored and I didn't see anyone leave the line despite their warnings. However at one corner two groups were giving competing terrible side effects. The two groups kept yelling louder and louder until one group in desperation started yelling don't listen to them (point at the other group of ant-vaxxers) they don't know what they are talking about.

    That made my day and to me it about sums up the anti-vax movement.

     
     
     
  2.  
     
     

    There is one party in Canada still manipulating this group despite statements to the contrary. And l include the Alberta government in that party. Seems like the Facebook doctors are still alive and well.

    If people make poor choices because of what they hear on social media and can't look at the information critically, they're not going to get any sympathy from me.

     
     
     
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  3.  
     
     

    The main issue at the moment is that public health authorities have abdicated their responsbility to protect public health. It has been amply demonstrated that high-quality respirators (N95s) protect people against COVID (as well as respiratory diseases); now that there is no more mandate, practically no one wears them, and transmission and hospitalizations are at a consistently high level. COVID-19 is not a mild respiratory disease. It affects every system in the body and can lead to long-term disability, even when it looks like it was "mild". Ventilation, filtration, masks, and vaccines of course, all help, but we have to use them.

     
     
     
     
     
  4.  
     
     

    Of course the fancy math words and headline numbers obscure the fatal flaw of this study: how does one define “misinformation”?

    The study decides that the insistence from top public health officials in 2020 that masks don’t work was not misinformation, but if Aunt Carole posted the same insistence on Facebook, that IS misinformation.

    Never mind that the words of top public health bureaucrats set infection control policy across the country while Aunt Carole’s rambling affect barely anyone.

    According to the study, “misinformation” is whatever they want it to be, which means the results of the study are also rather arbitrary.

    Maybe they should study why people don’t trust the public health bureaucrats instead of cranking out meaningless numbers.

     
     
     
  5.  
     
     

    There's no reason to believe this model is accurate. There is even less reason to Believe it is accurate when they don't tell you what the algorithms are. This article is very incomplete without that reference

     
     
     
     
     
     



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