‘Unethical and inappropriate’: What coroners’ records reveal about the gaps that led to migrant worker deaths
Ce document est une ressource clé
- Date
- 2022 
- Auteurs
- Sara Mojtehedzadeh 
- Résumé
- Report delves into the barriers faced by nine migrant workers who died across the province during the pandemic's first waves. - Ambulances dispatched to the wrong address. Workers turning down health care for fear they would have to pay for it. Employers — rather than health professionals — monitoring COVID-19 symptoms on high-risk Ontario farms. - These are among the "profound" barriers faced by nine migrant workers who died across the province during the pandemic's first waves — jeopardizing critical care when workers faced life-and-death health emergencies, a new study of coroners' records reveals. - The research conducted by a team of medical doctors, nurses and academics with decades of experience in migrant worker health found a host of failings that contributed to the fatalities, including poor testing protocol and inconsistent quarantine conditions with "limited oversight." 
- Titre du journal
- Toronto Star 
- Éditeur
- Toronto Star 
- Lieu de publication
- Online 
- Liens
- Secteurs économiques
- Agriculture and horticulture workers 
- Types de contenu
- Policy analysis 
- Groupes cibles
- Législateurs, Sensibilisation du public et Chercheurs 
- Pertinence géographique
- Ontario et Quebec 
