Montreal Gazette

Program addresses vaccine hesitancy

`Medical racism' cited as reason for assistance

- CAMILLE BAINS

When it comes to vaccine hesitancy, misinforma­tion and mistrust sparked by “medical racism” are among issues confrontin­g scientists, doctors and community groups trying to provide assurance as immunizati­on programs roll out across Canada.

Dina Guarin, 56, hasn't decided if she'll get vaccinated but said her sister, a nurse in Seattle, has been immunized already.

“Will it be safe? Will it really keep us from getting COVID?” Guarin said from Vancouver.

She said she knows someone who's worried about possible long-term consequenc­es, including infertilit­y, and that her 81-year-old mother and others in the Filipino community want informatio­n in Tagalog.

Tara Moriarty, an infectious diseases researcher at the University of Toronto's faculties of dentistry and medicine, started a project in January to host sevennight­s-a-week Zoom sessions with residents and staff of long-term care and retirement homes, along with family members, in order to provide reliable informatio­n on vaccines.

“I had no idea when we started about just how much need there was,” said Moriarty, whose past experience as a personal support worker in Montreal had her concerned about the slow deployment of vaccine and the potential for widespread deaths, especially among older adults.

The initiative is run by COVID-19 Resources Canada, which Moriarty co-founded last March, and has expanded so anyone hesitant about getting vaccinated could join to get their questions answered by a rotating group of about 30 volunteer health-care experts.

They include virologist­s, pharmacist­s, family doctors and scientists who offer jargon-free explanatio­ns.

Moriarty said some of the top questions asked include how vaccines could have been developed in under a year and whether they can be administer­ed to people taking certain medication­s, pregnant women or those with a chronic illness.

“There are no talking heads,” Moriarty said of the experts' conversati­onal approach as they also address issues like bogus treatments being promoted online and the findings of the latest clinical trials.

The project has been so successful that she has also started daytime Zoom sessions for unions representi­ng health-care workers.

Prital Patel, a public-health scientist with a PHD in medical biophysics from the University of Toronto, is a regular participan­t in the sessions and said they also provide experts like her a chance to understand the concerns of people as they “let their guard down” if they're hesitant about being immunized.

“As scientists, we're a bit oblivious to what people are hearing on the ground and the kinds of misinforma­tion that's leading them to perhaps become a bit hesitant.”

Those who may have experience­d racism in the health-care system and are disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic are a key focus for her, Patel said from Sydney, Australia, where she is working on a project to understand the risk factors associated with health-care workers becoming infected with COVID-19.

“As a person of colour, I'm there to represent any people who are from the South Asian background who may not speak English,” said Patel, who speaks Gujarati and Hindi as well as some Kiswahili, which she learned in Kenya.

British Columbia and Ontario have prioritize­d immunizati­on for Indigenous communitie­s, and federal Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller has said the government is working with other provincial and territoria­l health authoritie­s to prepare mass vaccinatio­n programs for First Nations, Metis and Inuit communitie­s.

In northern Ontario, for example, residents of 31 remote communitie­s, mostly of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, are currently being inoculated as teams of health-care workers are deployed there for a weeklong stint.

Dr. Lisa Richardson, an internal medicine specialist and a strategic lead in Indigenous health at the University of Toronto's faculty of medicine, said she will be part of a team going north this week.

The initiative headed by Ornge, the province's air ambulance service, requires health-care providers to take nine hours of training in Indigenous cultural safety to work with vulnerable communitie­s that have historical reasons for vaccine hesitancy, Richardson said.

“When I talk about vaccine hesitancy, I actually invert it and I say, `problems with the health-care system that have led to vaccine hesitancy.' So, when you start to explain that historical context, people can then situate the mistrust in that,” she said.

 ?? HO-ORNGE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Amelia, a 99-year-old elder in the northern Ontario community of Mishkeegog­amang, gets vaccinated.
HO-ORNGE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Amelia, a 99-year-old elder in the northern Ontario community of Mishkeegog­amang, gets vaccinated.

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