L’actualité ne cessera jamais de me faire réagir.
Alors que quasiment plus personne ne meurt du Covid-19 autour de moi (trois Québécois, hier, le 30 juin) et que peu sont hospitalisés (117), la tension ne diminue pas. Notre équipe de hockey, le Canadien de Montréal, est en finale de la coupe Stanley. Des débats sont en cours pour déterminer les modalités d’accueil du public moyennant une preuve de vaccination. Les nouvelles sur le variant Delta dans le monde se multiplient.
Bref, les ingrédients sont là pour une autre bataille idéologique entre les partisans et les opposants de l’obligation vaccinale, avec comme thème principal la liberté de prendre des risques pour sa santé.
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Breadcrumb Trail Links Ravary: Stereotyping can have deadly consequences The desire to simplify the world around us is strong, but stereotyping is a mental shortcut that gets in the way of thinking and learning.
Author of the article: Lise Ravary • Special to Montreal Gazette
Publishing date: May 31, 2021 • 2 days ago • 3 minute read • People hold a candlelight vigil in memory of Joyce Echaquan on September 29, 2020. The Atikamekw mother of seven died at the Joliette hospital after having been insulted, including with a barrage of racist stereotypes, by some staff members. Photo by ANNE-SOPHIE THILL /AFP via Getty Images
An Atikamekw woman who died after livestreaming the abusive remarks of hospital staff could have been saved if she'd been more closely monitored, an expert witness told a coroner's inquiry in Trois-Rivières, Que., on Thursday.
MONTREAL An Indigenous woman who was mocked at a Quebec hospital succumbed to a rare heart ailment and could have been saved, a Quebec coroner's inquest heard Thursday.