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Sheila Lewis is the latest casualty in the conservative war on expertise

The Alberta woman refused the COVID-19 vaccine that was necessary for her life-saving organ transplant to go ahead. Photo by Ed Us / Unsplash

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Sheila Annette Lewis, the terminally ill Alberta woman who needed a life-saving organ transplant but chose not to get the COVID-19 vaccine required to receive one, died last week.

Lewis’s death is a tragedy, and all the more so because it seems to have been so unnecessary. But it wasn’t an act of “medical discrimination” against the unvaccinated, as her supporters (and enablers) are trying to pretend. Instead, it’s just another in a long line of otherwise preventable deaths caused by misinformation around the COVID-19 vaccine and the people who continue to trade in it. And for some reason, the leader of Canada’s official Opposition — and if current polls hold, our next prime minister — chose to side with them.

The facts of Lewis’s case are uncomplicated, if not uncontroversial. She was diagnosed with a terminal condition in her mid-50s and placed on an organ transplant wait list in June 2020. Lewis updated all of her other vaccinations but refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine, which she described as “experimental.” In March 2021, her doctor told her that she needed a transplant if she wanted to live, and that the COVID vaccine was a necessary precondition. “He told me if I did not take the COVID-19 vaccine, I would not get the transplant, and if I did not get the transplant, I would die,” she said in a sworn affidavit.

This isn’t, as the vaccine-phobic community likes to pretend, because of some shared moral position in the medical community. It’s because organ transplantation is a high-risk procedure whose post-surgical interventions make the patient extremely vulnerable to viruses and diseases. According to statistics from Toronto’s University Health Network (UHN), unvaccinated transplant patients face a 12 per cent higher risk of organ rejection and a 30 per cent greater chance of dying from COVID-19.

More importantly, perhaps, the supply of available organs is extremely limited, and doctors have a responsibility to prioritize the patients most likely to care for them. “Remember, the organ is a really scarce resource,” Dr. Atul Humar, director of UHN’s Ajmera Transplant Centre, said in a 2021 CTV story. “It's something donated by another human being. And really, we have to go to all efforts to try to make sure the patient does well, but also that the organ is well cared for.”

Lewis was always free to prioritize her refusal to get vaccinated over her desire to get a life-saving medical procedure. But as the courts told her repeatedly — including two in Alberta — that didn’t constitute discrimination or a breach of her Charter rights. “It is beyond dispute that the applicant is the sole arbiter of what goes into her body,” Court of King’s Bench Justice Paul Belzil wrote in his decision. “I do not accept, however, that her beliefs and desire to protect her bodily integrity entitle her to impact the rights of other patients or the integrity of the (transplant program) generally.”

Sheila Lewis refused the COVID-19 vaccine that was necessary for her life-saving organ transplant. What her death says about the ongoing war on science and expertise, and the willingness of conservative politicians to participate in it.

Her case attracted the predictable rabble of anti-vaccine doctors, lawyers and online news outlets. The medical experts who testified in her case were actually from the University of Guelph’s Ontario Veterinary College, and as the Edmonton Journal reported, “both are associated with the anti-mandate Canadian COVID Care Alliance and have appeared on the anti-vaccine speaking circuit.”

Her lawyer, Allison Pejovic, is affiliated with the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, whose president John Carpay was just fined and disbarred in Manitoba along with a fellow JCCF lawyer for hiring a private investigator to trail the judge who was hearing a case involving COVID-19 public health orders. And, of course, Rebel Media and True North provided their predictably one-sided coverage of the whole fiasco — along with links to the usual petitions and fundraisers.

None of these people, I’d argue, had Lewis’s best interests in mind. What they saw was a willing martyr for their cause, one who could help them advance their own agendas or expand their audiences. If they genuinely wanted to help her, they should have sat her down and explained the science around COVID-19, or at least encouraged her to listen to the doctors who would do it for them. Instead, they chose to let her kill herself — in effect, to own the libs.

It wasn’t surprising to see Roman Baber, the newly appointed Conservative Party of Canada candidate for York Centre, join this fray. The former Ontario PC MPP was kicked out of Doug Ford’s caucus and party for his anti-vaccine views, ones he hasn’t backed away from in the least. “The Canada Health Act forbids discrimination, but Sheila Lewis was denied [a] transplant because of a lawful medical choice,” he tweeted. “Her death is a tragic failure of medical ethics and the administration of justice. I'll work to right this wrong until the last day of my career.”

CPC Leader Pierre Poilievre’s endorsement of this position was, on the other hand, a bit more surprising. “So glad Roman is our Conservative candidate,” he tweeted. “I couldn’t agree more.” Apparently, doctors making decisions about organ transplants are now on his list of gatekeepers, and it’s worth wondering who else might make it on there.

It’s also worth pointing out that there are some gates that need to be kept. Experts are a key part of modern society, and their knowledge underwrites so many of the things that we’re able to take for granted. If there’s one unifying element of Poilievre’s worldview, and by extension of the party he leads, it’s a hostility towards expertise. Whether it’s climate science, COVID-19 or monetary policy, contemporary conservatism seems to be instinctively opposed to the people who know the most.

In the end, that’s what cost Sheila Lewis her life. We’d all do well to remember that — and understand there are many, many other lives still at stake.

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