The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on social determinants of health, mental health, and substance use among key populations affected by sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections in Canada
Abstract
Objectives:
We assessed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on social determinants of health, mental health, substance use, and access to mental health and harm reduction services among key populations disproportionately impacted by sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBI).
Methods:
Online surveys (2021‒2022) were conducted in Canada among people who use drugs or alcohol (PWUD); African, Caribbean, and Black people (ACB); and First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples (FNIM). Descriptive analyses were conducted on social determinants of health, substance use, and access to services, stratified by changes in mental health status since the start of the pandemic.
Results:
A total of 3773 participants (1034 PWUD, 1556 ACB, and 1183 FNIM) completed the surveys, with 45.6% reporting a major/moderate impact of the pandemic on their ability to pay bills and 53% experiencing food insecurity since the start of the pandemic. Half (49.4%) of participants reported deteriorating mental health. A higher increase in substance use and related behaviours was seen in those with worsening mental health. Among those using substances, two thirds (69.4%) of those with worsening mental health reported increasing their use of substances alone, compared to 46.9% of those with better/similar mental health. Access to mental health and harm reduction services was low.
Conclusion:
These intersecting health issues are among the risk factors for STBBI acquisition and act as barriers to care. Equitable interventions and policies addressing downstream and upstream determinants of health, with meaningful and sustainable leadership from key populations, may improve their health and well-being, to lower STBBI impact and improve future pandemic responses.
Article type: Research Article
Keywords: Social determinants of health, Mental health, Substance use, Key populations, Déterminants sociaux de la santé, santé mentale, consommation de substances, populations clés
Affiliations: https://ror.org/023xf2a37grid.415368.d0000 0001 0805 4386Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections Surveillance Division, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, ON Canada
License: © Crown 2024 CC BY 4.0 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
Article links: DOI: 10.17269/s41997-024-00888-4 | PubMed: 38691338 | PMC: PMC11133293
Relevance: Moderate: mentioned 3+ times in text
Full text: PDF (699 KB)
Introduction
Structural inequities such as racial discrimination and economic disparities produce systematic disadvantages and create an environment in which social determinants of health are impacted (Baciu et al., ref. 2017; Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), ref. 2023b). These determinants, like unemployment and food insecurity, can particularly affect key populations that are disproportionately impacted by sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBI) in Canada. These include people who use drugs or alcohol (PWUD); African, Caribbean, and Black people (ACB); and First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples (FNIM) (PHAC, ref. 2024). FNIM peoples face inequities in health as a result of systemic and structural factors, such as colonization, loss of language and culture, and intergenerational trauma (Jongbloed et al., ref. 2019). ACB people face systemic anti-Black racism that stems from historical slavery roots and extends to the education system and the criminal justice system (Collaborative Critical Research for Equity and Transformation in Health (CO-CREATH), ref. 2022a; Department of Justice Canada, ref. 2023; Ezezika et al., ref. 2023). Unique challenges for PWUD include precarious living and stigma associated with and criminalization of substance use (Russell et al., ref. 2021). Taken together, these inequities can have an effect on social determinants of health, mental health, and substance use and represent risk factors for infectious diseases, including STBBI, and act as barriers to care (Baciu et al., ref. 2017; Jongbloed et al., ref. 2019). As highlighted in the pan-Canadian STBBI Framework for Action, a focus on key populations is crucial to reduce the health impact of STBBI in Canada by 2030 and to achieve the World Health Organization 2030 global STBBI targets (PHAC, ref. 2018). The Government of Canada’s recently published renewed 2024‒2030 STBBI Action Plan builds on this work and continues the focus on health equity and equity-deserving populations (PHAC, ref. 2024).
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a negative impact on social determinants of health, such as food insecurity and domestic violence (PHAC, ref. 2021), and on the mental health of Canadians. Findings from national surveys, conducted throughout different waves of the pandemic from 2020 to 2022, showed a significant increase in negative psychosocial outcomes relative to pre-COVID levels (Brotto et al., ref. 2021), including elevated mental health concerns and substance use in regions across Canada (Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSU), ref. 2023). The interplay among social determinants of health, mental health, and substance use is well documented (Brotto et al., ref. 2021; CCSU, ref. 2023; Men et al., ref. 2021; Mental Health Commission of Canada, ref. 2024; Newfoundland and Labrador (NL) Health Services, ref. 2023). For example, discrimination is generally associated with negative mental health outcomes (Baciu et al., ref. 2017). There is also research suggesting that perceived danger and fear of violence can have an influence on stress and substance use (Baciu et al., ref. 2017).
While these changes in social determinants of health and mental health were reported in the general population, the COVID-19 pandemic may have had a greater impact on psychosocial and health outcomes among key populations affected by STBBI in Canada. In this work, we describe the collective results of three surveys conducted among three key population groups: PWUD, ACB, and FNIM. These surveys aimed to explore the impacts of COVID-19 on social determinants of health, mental health, substance use, and access to mental health and harm reduction services. We present indicators related to social determinants of health, as well as indicators related to substance use and access to services stratified by changes in mental health status since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods
Study design
Three anonymous, self-administered, online surveys were conducted by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) in 2021‒2022 through the Tracks Surveillance System. The survey design was inspired by the rapid assessment trendspotter methodology used in the European Monitoring Centre for Drug Addiction’s online survey on the impact of COVID-19 (European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, ref. 2020).
To ensure community engagement in the planning, promotion, and recruitment of the surveys, PHAC collaborated with different partners for each survey. Working groups were formed and contributed to protocol and questionnaire design, promotion of the survey during data collection, and review of knowledge translation products. For the survey among PWUD, key stakeholders included the Canadian Association of People who Use Drugs (CAPUD). CAPUD established and led a national expert working group comprised of: (1) people with lived and/or had living experience of drug use, among whom some were individuals from the African, Caribbean, and Black; Indigenous; and 2SLGBTQIA + communities; (2) representatives from community-based organizations offering STBBI-related services, academic institutions, and advocacy groups; and (3) community-engaged researchers.
For the survey among ACB, key stakeholders included the University of Ottawa and Women’s Health in Women’s Hands, who assembled the national expert working group (NEWG). NEWG, an innovative community-based participatory approach, consisted of ACB researchers, service providers, and community members and leaders. NEWG referred to this survey as the African, Caribbean and Black Community PHAC-funded COVID-19 Impact (APCI) study. The group promoted the survey through various methods to ensure appropriate representation across diverse ACB sub-populations and led the dissemination of results through a report (CO-CREATH, ref. 2022a) and a community event (CO-CREATH, ref. 2022b).
The survey among FNIM was conducted in collaboration with the National Collaborating Centres for Indigenous Health (NCCIH) and Infectious Diseases (NCCID) which established a National Indigenous STBBI Advisory Committee. The committee comprises Indigenous experts in the STBBI and public health sector. Analyses of these data are underway, led by NCCIH and NCCID, with the support of the Advisory Committee.
Participants and data collection
Eligible FNIM or ACB participants were aged 15 + (FNIM) or 18 + (ACB), lived in Canada, and self-identified as FNIM or ACB, respectively. Eligible PWUD participants were aged 18 + , lived in Canada, and reported any substance use including alcohol or cannabis 6 months prior to data collection. Survey links were distributed through (1) PHAC, (2) stakeholders, and (3) working groups detailed above. Data collection for the PWUD arm started first, from January to February 2021, followed by ACB, from May to July 2021, and FNIM, from July 2021 to January 2022. Given that these were three distinct surveys, participants could have potentially completed more than one survey if they self-identified as belonging to more than one key population (i.e. PWUD identifying as FNIM or ACB). However, this proportion was low (< 11%).
Variables and statistical analysis
The three surveys were structured similarly with comparable content. There were minor differences in a few questions based on community needs and realities identified by community partners. Information was collected on sociodemographic characteristics, changes in social determinants of health (employment and financial security, food security, feelings of safety, domestic violence), mental health, substance use, and access to mental health, harm reduction, and STBBI-related services, since the start of the pandemic. Using pooled data, descriptive analyses were conducted to present indicators related to social determinants of health and selected indicators of substance use and access to services stratified by changes in mental health status. The latter is based on the following question: “Compared to before the COVID-19 pandemic started, how would you say your mental health is now?” Participants were stratified into two groups: those who answered, “much better now”, “somewhat better now”, or “about the same” and those who answered, “somewhat worse now” and “much worse now”. All analyses were conducted using R statistical software.
Ethics approval
The survey protocol and questionnaire were approved by the Health Canada/PHAC Research Ethics Board (REB 2020-013P).
Results
A convenience sample of 3773 participants (1034 PWUD, 1556 ACB, and 1183 FNIM [70.4% First Nations; 23.7% Métis; 4.5% Inuit; 1.4% other]) completed the respective surveys (Table 1). The majority of participants were from Ontario (39.7% of PWUD, 42.7% of ACB, and 25.8% of FNIM). The two provinces with the higher proportion of participants were British Columbia (14.1%) and Nova Scotia (9.4%) for PWUD; Quebec (12.7%) and British Columbia/Alberta (10.9%) for ACB; and British Columbia (24.2%) and Manitoba (13.4%) for FNIM. Most participants were cisgender women (61.2–80.9%).
Table 1: Sociodemographic characteristics of PWUD, ACB, and FNIM participants
| Characteristic | PWUD (n = 1034) | ACB (n = 1556) | FNIM (n = 1183) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | Totala | % | n | Total | % | n | Total | % | |
| Province or territory where participant lives | |||||||||
| British Columbia | 146 | 1032 | 14.1 | 169 | 1554 | 10.9 | 286 | 1183 | 24.2 |
| Alberta | 75 | 1032 | 7.3 | 170 | 1554 | 10.9 | 170 | 1183 | 14.4 |
| Saskatchewan | 39 | 1032 | 3.8 | 30 | 1554 | 1.9 | 86 | 1183 | 7.3 |
| Manitoba | 46 | 1032 | 4.5 | 19 | 1554 | 1.2 | 158 | 1183 | 13.4 |
| Ontario | 410 | 1032 | 39.7 | 664 | 1554 | 42.7 | 305 | 1183 | 25.8 |
| Quebec | 126 | 1032 | 12.2 | 197 | 1554 | 12.7 | 42 | 1183 | 3.6 |
| New Brunswick | 41 | 1032 | 4 | 62 | 1554 | 4 | 32 | 1183 | 2.7 |
| Nova Scotia | 97 | 1032 | 9.4 | 54 | 1554 | 3.5 | 33 | 1183 | 2.8 |
| Prince Edward Island | 7 | 1032 | 0.7 | 67 | 1554 | 4.3 | 4 | 1183 | 0.3 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 31 | 1032 | 3 | 81 | 1554 | 5.2 | 31 | 1183 | 2.6 |
| Territoriesb | 14 | 1032 | 1.4 | 39 | 1554 | 2.5 | 31 | 1183 | 2.5 |
| None of the abovec | 0 | 1032 | 0 | 2 | 1554 | 0.1 | 5 | 1183 | 0.4 |
| Age group | |||||||||
| Younger than 25 years | 105 | 1034 | 10.2 | 178 | 1556 | 11.4 | 64 | 1183 | 5.4 |
| 25 to 39 years | 449 | 1034 | 43.4 | 616 | 1556 | 39.6 | 279 | 1183 | 23.6 |
| 40 to 54 years | 298 | 1034 | 28.8 | 519 | 1556 | 33.4 | 385 | 1183 | 32.5 |
| 55 years or older | 182 | 1034 | 17.6 | 243 | 1556 | 15.6 | 455 | 1183 | 38.5 |
| Gender identityd | |||||||||
| Cisgender female | 622 | 1016 | 61.2 | 990 | 1496 | 66.2 | 927 | 1146 | 80.9 |
| Cisgender male | 331 | 1016 | 32.6 | 462 | 1496 | 30.9 | 142 | 1146 | 12.9 |
| Transfemininee | 20 | 1016 | 2 | 11 | 1496 | 0.7 | 15 | 1146 | 1.3 |
| Transmasculinef | 43 | 1016 | 4.2 | 33 | 1496 | 2.2 | 62 | 1146 | 5.4 |
| Citizenship status | |||||||||
| Canadian citizen, born in Canada | 923 | 1032 | 89.4 | 358 | 1546 | 23.2 | NA | NA | NA |
| Canadian citizen, not born in Canada | 85 | 1032 | 8.2 | 630 | 1546 | 40.8 | NA | NA | NA |
| Landed immigrant or permanent resident | 17 | 1032 | 1.7 | 291 | 1546 | 18.8 | NA | NA | NA |
| Convention refugee or temporary resident | 7 | 1032 | 0.7 | 254 | 1546 | 16.4 | NA | NA | NA |
| Not a Canadian citizen — other | 0 | 1032 | 0 | 13 | 1546 | 0.8 | NA | NA | NA |
| Education, highest level | |||||||||
| Less than or some high school | 61 | 1024 | 6 | 67 | 1462 | 4.6 | 96 | 1146 | 8.4 |
| Finished high school | 80 | 1024 | 7.8 | 105 | 1462 | 7.2 | 221 | 1146 | 19.3 |
| Some or completed college, CEGEP, vocational school, trade school, or apprenticeship training | 279 | 1024 | 27.2 | 253 | 1462 | 17.3 | 645 | 1146 | 56.3 |
| Some or completed university certificate or diploma, undergraduate university degree, or graduate or professional university degree | 599 | 1024 | 58.5 | 1027 | 1462 | 70.2 | 160 | 1146 | 14.0 |
| Other | 5 | 1024 | 0.5 | 10 | 1462 | 0.7 | 24 | 1146 | 2.1 |
The sum of the percentages may not equal 100% due to rounding, unless stated otherwise
STBBI, sexually transmitted and blood-borne infection; -, indicates data was suppressed due to small cell counts
aTotal represents total counts for the corresponding indicator excluding “don’t know”, “refused”, and “not stated” values, unless stated otherwise
bIncludes Nunavut, Yukon, and Northwest Territories
cRespondents were eligible to participate if they reported that they were in Canada at the time of enrollment. While all respondents represented in these tables met all eligibility criteria, participants were provided the option to select “None of the above” as a valid answer to this question
dThe Multidimensional Sex/Gender Measure was used to measure gender identity (Bauer et al., ref. 2017)
eTransfeminine included those assigned male at birth who identified with either female or a non-binary gender
fTransmasculine included those assigned female at birth who identified with either male or a non-binary gender
Social determinants of health
Regarding social determinants of health, more than half of all participants (53%) reported experiencing food insecurity while almost half of participants (45.6%) reported the pandemic had a “major or moderate” impact on their ability to pay bills (Table 2). Precarious housing across all three samples was 8.5%. Almost a quarter said they were feeling less safe at home. Experiencing any kind of abuse since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic ranged from 28.2% to 56.3%. Among these, 23.4–53.4% reported experiencing abuse more often since the start of the pandemic.
Table 2: Overview of social determinants of health among PWUD, ACB, and FNIM participants
| Indicator | All participants | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| n | Totala | % | |
| Housing statusb | |||
| Stable housingc | 3405 | 3772 | 91.5 |
| Precarious or inadequate housingd | 367 | 3772 | 8.5 |
| Financial security | |||
| Change in work situation since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: reduced hours and/or pay or had to stop working | 1311 | 3592 | 36.5 |
| Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on ability to pay bills: major and moderate | 1638 | 3589 | 45.6 |
| Food security | |||
| Experienced food insecurity since the start of the COVID-19 pandemice | 1801 | 3398 | 53.0 |
| Feelings of safety and domestic violence | |||
| Change in self-reported safety where participant lives since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: less safe | |||
| Among all participants | 760 | 3350 | 22.7 |
| Among those who felt very safe in the home in the year before the pandemic | 355 | 2025 | 17.5 |
| Among those who felt somewhat safe or did not feel safe in the home in the year before the pandemic | 393 | 1245 | 31.6 |
| Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: | |||
| Experienced verbal abuse: any | 1663 | 2955 | 56.3 |
| Among participants who experienced verbal abuse Change in frequency of verbal abuse: more often | 888 | 1663 | 53.4 |
| Experienced physical abuse: any | 854 | 2903 | 29.4 |
| Among participants who experienced physical abuse Change in frequency of physical abuse: more often | 262 | 854 | 30.7 |
| Experienced sexual aggression: any | 806 | 2863 | 28.2 |
| Among participants who experienced sexual abuse Change in frequency of sexual aggression: more often | 189 | 806 | 23.4 |
| Experienced financial abuse: any | 951 | 2881 | 33.0 |
| Among participants who experienced financial abuse Change in frequency of financial abuse: more often | 300 | 951 | 31.5 |
| Mental health | |||
| Change in mental health status since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: somewhat or much worse now | |||
| Among all participants | 1864 | 3770 | 49.4 |
| Among those with excellent, very good, or good mental health at the time of the survey | 746 | 2267 | 32.9 |
| Among those with fair or poor mental health at the time of the survey | 1117 | 1502 | 74.4 |
aTotal represents total counts for the corresponding indicators excluding “don’t know”, “refused”, and “not stated” values, unless stated otherwise, which is why the total counts differ by indicator
bThis indicator measured the participant’s living situation since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants could report more than one type of living situation
cParticipants were classified as living in stable housing if they were only living in their own apartment or house, or in a relative’s or friend’s place
dIf a participant indicated living in any of the following precarious housing situations, they were classified as living in precarious or inadequate housing: living in multiple residences or couch surfing, a hotel or motel room, rooming or boarding house, shelter or hostel, transition or halfway house, psychiatric institution or drug treatment facility, public place, or correctional facility
eParticipants were classified as experiencing food insecurity if they indicated “Often true” or “Sometimes true” to any of the following food insecurity situations since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: you or other household members couldn’t afford to eat healthy and balanced meals; you ate less than you felt you should because there wasn’t enough money to buy food; others in your household ate less than you felt they should because there wasn’t enough money to buy food; you or other household members accessed food or meals, at no cost to you, from a community organization
Mental health and substance use
Among all participants, 49.4% reported their mental health was “somewhat or much worse” since the start of the pandemic. Compared to participants who reported their mental health was “same or better” since the start of the pandemic, a higher proportion of participants with “somewhat or much worse” mental health reported increasing their substance use and risks associated with substance use (Table 3). For example, 71.4% of participants with worsening mental health reported using alcohol since the start of the pandemic; among them, 57.9% reported an increase in their use. In contrast, 55.1% of participants with “same or better” mental health reported using alcohol and 36.1% reported an increase in their use. Among other substance use behaviours, a higher proportion of participants with worsening mental health reported an increase in the number of different triggers for using substances (83% vs. 52.8% among participants with same/better mental health) and an increase in using substances alone (69.4% vs. 46.9% among participants with same/better mental health).
Table 3: Mental health, substance use, and access to services among PWUD, ACB, and FNIM participants
| Change in mental health status since the start of the pandemic (n = 3770) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Much better, somewhat better, about the same (n = 1906) | Somewhat or much worse now (n = 1864) | |||||
| n | Totala | % | n | Totala | % | |
| Substance use | ||||||
| Drug used since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||
| Alcohol: used | 850 | 1544 | 55.1 | 1082 | 1515 | 71.4 |
| Among those who used alcohol | ||||||
| Increase use of alcohol | 307 | 850 | 36.1 | 627 | 1082 | 57.9 |
| Cannabis: used | 514 | 1546 | 33.2 | 791 | 1513 | 52.3 |
| Among those who used cannabis | ||||||
| Increase use of cannabis | 261 | 514 | 50.8 | 550 | 791 | 69.5 |
| Cocaine/crack: used | 109 | 1552 | 7.0 | 159 | 1512 | 10.5 |
| Among those who used cocaine/crack | ||||||
| Increase use of cocaine/crack | 42 | 109 | 38.5 | 84 | 159 | 52.8 |
| Speed/meth: used | 81 | 1554 | 5.2 | 136 | 1513 | 9.0 |
| Among those who used speed/meth | ||||||
| Increase use of speed/meth | 28 | 81 | 34.6 | 78 | 136 | 57.4 |
| Hallucinogens: used | 159 | 1556 | 10.2 | 201 | 1509 | 13.3 |
| Among those who used hallucinogens | ||||||
| Increase use of hallucinogens | 58 | 159 | 36.5 | 102 | 201 | 50.7 |
| Ecstasy: used | 100 | 1556 | 6.4 | 104 | 1507 | 6.9 |
| Among those who used ecstasy | ||||||
| Increase use of ecstasy | 19 | 100 | 19.0 | 35 | 104 | 33.7 |
| Heroin, fentanyl or other opioids: used | 81 | 1563 | 5.2 | 104 | 1511 | 6.9 |
| Among those who used heroin | ||||||
| Increase use of heroin, fentanyl or other opioids | 29 | 81 | 35.8 | 56 | 104 | 53.8 |
| Substance use behaviours | ||||||
| Among those who used substances | ||||||
| Increases in substance consumption behaviours, since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||
| Had different triggers for using | 153 | 290 | 52.8 | 512 | 617 | 83.0 |
| Used alone | 149 | 318 | 46.9 | 387 | 558 | 69.4 |
| Used substances not usually consumed | 82 | 191 | 42.9 | 232 | 376 | 61.7 |
| Had withdrawal symptoms | 73 | 176 | 41.5 | 202 | 343 | 58.9 |
| Worried about overdosing | 53 | 157 | 33.8 | 139 | 303 | 45.9 |
| Shared used equipment such as needles or syringes, pipes, tourniquets, swabs, and cookers | 22 | 108 | 20.4 | 53 | 198 | 26.8 |
| Was unable to get the substances used | 67 | 222 | 30.2 | 157 | 380 | 41.3 |
| Access to mental health services | ||||||
| Accessed or considered accessing mental health and wellness services since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic | 777 | 1877 | 41.4 | 1229 | 1836 | 66.9 |
| Among those who accessed or considered accessing mental health and wellness services | ||||||
| Ability to access mental health and wellness services | ||||||
| Not able to access services | 144 | 776 | 18.6 | 332 | 1216 | 27.3 |
| Sometimes able and sometimes not able to access services | 312 | 776 | 40.2 | 581 | 1216 | 47.8 |
| Always able to access services | 320 | 776 | 41.2 | 303 | 1216 | 24.9 |
| Among those who used substances Access to harm reduction services | ||||||
| Accessed or considered accessing harm reduction services since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic | 93 | 1016 | 9.2 | 152 | 1255 | 12.1 |
aTotal represents total counts for the corresponding indicators excluding “don’t know”, “refused”, and “not stated” values, unless stated otherwise, which is why the total counts differ by indicator
Access to care
Among participants with worsening mental health, 67% accessed or considered accessing mental health and wellness services. Among them, 75% reported difficulties, as they were “not able” or “sometimes able” to access these services since the start of the pandemic (Table 3). Among those who reported having the same or better mental health, 41.4% accessed or considered accessing mental health services, while 58.8% reported difficulties in accessing these services.
Discussion
Results from three online surveys among PWUD, ACB, and FNIM people highlight the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on social determinants of health, mental health, substance use, and access to care. PWUD, ACB, and FNIM participants reported worsening food insecurity, financial hardship, and feelings of safety since the start of the pandemic. Higher proportions of participants reported these experiences compared to general population surveys conducted by Statistics Canada. Almost half of survey participants reported that the COVID-19 pandemic had a major or moderate impact on their ability to pay bills. In comparison, as of February 2021, around one fifth of Canadians reported difficulty in paying expenses related to housing, food, transportation, or other expenses (Charnock et al., ref. 2021). In 2021, 16% of Canadian families reported experiencing food insecurity, which increased to 18% in 2022 (Statistics Canada, ref. 2023a). In contrast, half of participants from the impact of COVID-19 surveys reported experiencing some form of food insecurity since the start of the pandemic. In addition, 23% of survey participants reported feeling less safe where they lived during the COVID-19 pandemic. This proportion is greater than what was observed in a survey among the general Canadian population conducted in March and April 2020, where 8% reported being very or extremely concerned about the possibility of violence in their home (Statistics Canada, ref. 2020).
Most survey participants who reported experiencing unfavourable social determinants of health before the pandemic reported that these experiences worsened during the pandemic, compared to those who reported more favourable social determinants of health before the pandemic. For example, 17.5% of those who felt very safe at home in the year before the pandemic reported feeling less safe since the start of the pandemic, compared to 31.6% of those who felt somewhat safe or did not feel safe before the pandemic, who felt even less safe during the pandemic. These findings reflect the historical pattern seen in previous epidemics, going back to the Black Death in the 1300s (Wade, ref. 2020), the emergence of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the 1980s (Crowley et al., ref. 2021), and the 2003 global SARS outbreak (O’Sullivan & Phillips, ref. 2019). People who were often already marginalized pre-pandemic—“the poor and minorities who face discrimination in ways that damage their health or limit their access to care”—have always borne the brunt of local and global pandemics. In turn, pandemics themselves affect societal inequality by reinforcing existing power structures and imbalances (Wade, ref. 2020).
People in Canada faced heightened mental health challenges during the pandemic (PHAC, ref. 2023a) and this was also reflected in these surveys. In addition to challenges related to deteriorating social determinants of health, survey participants also reported worsening mental health and increases in substance use. In particular, increases in substance use and in related behaviours such as using alone were higher among those with worsened mental health, compared to those with the same and better mental health. The reported increase in using substances alone is particularly alarming, as this behaviour is a risk factor for fatal overdose. Many of the survey participants with worsening mental health also reported an increase in the number of triggers for using substances. This is also alarming because alcohol and drug-related deaths reached new highs during the pandemic (Statistics Canada, ref. 2023b), in the context of Canada already experiencing a surge in opioid-related deaths and other associated harms (PHAC, ref. 2023c).
The demand for mental health services in Canada has significantly increased over time, accompanied by longer wait times for specialists (CBC, ref. 2023). This high demand is coupled with increased difficulty in accessing services. A high proportion of survey participants were not always able to access mental health services when they considered using them. Importantly, the pandemic led to changes in the delivery of mental health and harm reduction services to key populations (Crowley et al., ref. 2021; Matskiv et al., ref. 2022). For example, some providers added telehealth for delivery of mental health services (PHAC, ref. 2022). Innovations in the delivery of harm reduction services included virtual overdose monitoring services (Matskiv et al., ref. 2022) and self-serve pick-up of harm reduction supplies at service window or curbside depots in some parts of Canada (PHAC, ref. 2022). Further investigation is now needed to better understand how changes in service delivery models during the pandemic are affecting the ability of clients to get the care they seek. These can include impact evaluations to assess the reach of these interventions and whether changes in outcomes of interest (e.g. substance use–related harms) can be attributed to them (Harper & Nandi, ref. 2017). Evaluations can be done by those involved in providing these services in collaboration with community members, researchers, and experts in policy impact assessments.
Findings from these surveys add to the growing evidence of health inequities faced by key populations in Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic and highlight the urgent need for action. While these surveys were cross-sectional in design with limited ability to assess causal links, the findings nonetheless contribute to our understanding of how the pandemic may have placed key populations, especially those with worsening mental health, at greater risk of poorer health. This is coupled with employment or income loss, increased food insecurity, and feeling less safe at home.
Upstream interventions and policies that promote health equity need to be prioritized to ensure they reach at-risk populations (PHAC, ref. 2021). To reduce the health impact of STBBI in Canada by 2030 (PHAC, ref. 2018) and to be better prepared for the next pandemic, incorporating an equity lens is essential. Applying an equity lens involves planning, implementing, and evaluating public health interventions through a perspective that prioritizes fairness, justice, and inclusivity. Practically, this should ensure an investment on health interventions based on the needs of equity-deserving populations that are in disadvantaged positions because of structural inequities leading to worsened social determinants of health. This can only be achieved through intersectoral collaboration across federal, provincial, territorial, and regional governments; Indigenous governments and communities; community-led organizations rooted within or working closely with populations disproportionately impacted by STBBI; and key stakeholders in relevant disciplines such as social sciences and economics (PHAC, ref. 2021).
An example of a successful intersectoral collaboration includes the “COVID-19 Vulnerable Populations Task Group” (NL Health Services, ref. 2023) that was formed by the provincial government of Newfoundland and Labrador in the early days of the pandemic. The group included representatives from all levels of government, health authorities, Indigenous governments, and community organizations. Among other tasks, the group developed COVID-19 guidance documents for key populations and ensured that all sectors remain informed of the impacts and gaps in services for marginalized communities. The group also established subcommittees focused on opioid dependency treatment, housing, and homelessness. Another example is the provincial Indigenous COVID-19 Collaboration table in Manitoba (Lavoie et al., ref. 2023). The group consisted of representatives from Regional Health Authorities, FNIM organizations, and health system decision-makers from Manitoba, as well as Nunavut, to support a coordinated approach to pandemic planning, including how to roll out vaccination strategies in Indigenous communities where distrust of the health system is present (Lavoie et al., ref. 2023). Although these groups were centered on the COVID-19 pandemic, they provide important learnings that could be applied to the STBBI field and beyond.
In terms of STBBI response, one of the guiding principles of the government of Canada’s STBBI action plan is health equity, where all people, regardless of sex, gender, race, income, and other characteristics, have equitable access to care (i.e. access based on the need for care) (PHAC, ref. 2024). The continued implementation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, ref. 2015) is another guiding principle. One of the priorities of the STBBI action plan is to support FNIM initiatives, leadership, and self-determination, in line with calls 18 to 24 pertaining to health care services, emphasizing the elimination of anti-Indigenous racism in the health care system and having a culturally competent care. Of note, the renewal of the STBBI action plan involved consultations with over 800 people across Canada in 2023, including members from key populations, health care professionals, members and representatives from community-based organizations, researchers, and activists. The action plan identifies federal priorities and actions grouped in four pillars (prevention, testing, initiation of care, and ongoing care) with nine federal departments responsible for their delivery. Each action is coupled with established indicators to monitor and measure progress from 2024 to 2030, with a commitment to work with key populations and community partners. This includes providing ongoing support using existing mechanisms, such as the Black Expert Working Group for National HIV Surveillance (PHAC, ref. 2024).
One way to ensure the application of a health equity lens in prevention-based policies, programs, or interventions is by using the Health Equity Impact Assessment (HEIA) tool, specifically for STBBI (Canadian Public Health Association, ref. 2014). This tool was developed by the Canadian Public Health Association in consultation and partnership with informants from key populations, public health professionals, clinicians, volunteers, and researchers. The tool is meant to support providers to ensure that their initiatives do not increase any existing health inequities. The HEIA includes five steps: scoping, thinking of unintended impacts, developing mitigation strategies, monitoring success, and disseminating results for improved equity and awareness. It highlights the importance of considering diverse populations, identifying factors impacting vulnerability, and proposing mitigation strategies to address negative impacts on key groups. The Chief Public Health Officer of Canada’s 2023 report on the State of Public Health in Canada highlights the HEIA tool as a health promotion tool for emergency management procedures (PHAC, ref. 2023b). Indeed, a health promotion approach is emphasized as a strategy to strengthen both emergency management and population-level resilience. Supporting community involvement, providing sustainable funding, and incorporating Indigenous knowledge(s) are all essential components of this comprehensive approach (PHAC, ref. 2023b).
Limitations of the study
This work has some limitations. An anonymous online survey approach was used given the challenges of using probability-based sampling during the COVID-19 pandemic. The online nature of the surveys may have contributed to a selection bias, since those without access to a computer or internet would be less likely to participate. Also, because of convenience sampling, it is not possible to generalize the findings to all PWUD, ACB, and FNIM people in Canada. Together, this may have affected reported indicators. However, engaging with community stakeholders that promoted the surveys to help assure diverse representation across sub-populations may have mitigated some biases.
Conclusion
For emergency response and STBBI-related prevention and care interventions to succeed for PWUD, ACB, and FNIM populations, it is crucial to work closely with communities. Through meaningful and sustainable relationships, it will be possible to develop equitable interventions that remain robust during a pandemic or other emergencies. When confronted with the next public health emergency, it will be these relationships that will allow for the timely mobilization of accessible services for key populations.
Contributions to knowledge
What does this study add to existing knowledge?
- Findings from the three surveys add to the growing evidence of health inequities faced by key populations in Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic. The similarity of the surveys across three key populations allowed for a comprehensive assessment of the impact on social determinants of health, mental health, and substance use. Study findings highlight the pattern where equity-deserving populations bear the brunt of health crises.
- While this study sheds light on the challenges faced by key populations, there is a need for a more nuanced understanding, especially concerning the intersectionality of various identified factors affecting health outcomes. Additionally, exploring the long-term impacts of the pandemic on the health and well-being of these populations could provide insights for future public health planning and response strategies.
What are the key implications for public health interventions, practice, or policy?
- Current work on confronting STBBI epidemics and future pandemic preparedness plans should incorporate an equity lens. This includes considering social determinants of health, meaningfully collaborating with key populations when planning and implementing interventions, and securing contingency budgets for innovative service delivery models.
- Successful models of intersectoral collaboration, like the task groups from Newfoundland and Manitoba, highlight the importance of engaging representatives from various levels of government, health authorities, Indigenous governments, and community organizations, to ensure Public Health responses are comprehensive, equitable, and tailored to the unique needs of key populations.
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