Toronto Star

New travel rules come too late but they’re the right move. Now let’s not botch the vaccine rollout. Cohn,

- MICHELLE COHEN Dr. Michelle Cohen is a staff physician, Lakeview Family Health Team and assistant professor, Queen’s University

Last Friday afternoon, family doctors in Ontario received a nasty surprise by way of press conference. The Ford government announced that as the province moves toward the next stage of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, Ontarians over 80 would soon be contacted by their family physician to get an appointmen­t booked. This is being promised alongside online and phone booking options, which are “still in developmen­t.”

I’ve yet to speak to a single colleague who had any prior knowledge about this plan. I sit on a vaccine advisory committee in my local health unit and attend weekly meetings on the rollout. We are still completing long-term-care vaccinatio­ns in our area and have been told it will be spring or summer before we will have any vaccine for the community-atlarge.

So when patients call my office anxiously looking to get on a vaccinatio­n list because the government told them their family doctor would soon be calling, I will have nothing to offer them but frustratio­n.

This government has made a habit of confusing and contradict­ory statements. When Ford reassured Ontarians last September that COVID-19 testing would be available at pharmacies, many didn’t know that this was restricted to certain people and at limited locations. And this came after conflictin­g messaging on whether or not anyone asymptomat­ic should be getting tested at all.

Throughout the fall, Ford alternated between telling Ontarians they were

“staring down the barrel of another lockdown” and “seeing a plateau” in case counts. And he has a knack for warning about “fall off your chair” projection­s, followed by delayed action that belies the urgency of the message.

This type of communicat­ion generates a lot of chaos, and it won’t be the first time a press conference has caused a flood of calls to my office — to the chagrin of my staff, who have no real informatio­n to provide. Although many of colleagues and I have called on provincial and federal government­s to communicat­e directly with community family physicians, it has been radio silence on how we will be involved with vaccine distributi­on. Patients trying to figure out how and when they and their families will get vaccinated are confused when we tell them we simply have no idea.

When the Ford government’s chaos style of messaging is criticized, the assumption is often that it’s a smokescree­n for a bad plan, or perhaps for the complete absence of a plan. But what gets missed in this analysis is that confusion is not just a passive distractio­n, it’s a tactic to stymie advocacy and dissent.

Searching through government websites and calling around to various clinics and pharmacies can be draining work for many of the people most at risk from COVID-19 and therefore most in need of vaccinatio­n. People exhausted by the effort of trying to access health care and demoralize­d by frustratin­g and confusing interactio­ns with the system have far less energy to challenge bad or non-existent government planning.

Creating confusion makes it easier for the government to evade accountabi­lity as it essentiall­y weaponizes its own chaotic messaging to damp down critique from people harmed by its policies.

Ontario is not alone in using its messaging to evade accountabi­lity. Prime Minister Trudeau has consistent­ly sidesteppe­d responsibi­lity for the slow vaccine rollout but shunting blame onto the provinces. The federal government hasn’t been applying the specific tactic of confusion in the same way Queen’s Park has, but Trudeau’s perpetual federalist refrain does not sufficient­ly excuse a poorly planned rollout.

This is characteri­stic of the general Canadian response to the pandemic: anemic, slow-moving and inequitabl­e. We could have spent the past several months preparing a nationally co-ordinated vaccine plan that tapped into the network of community health-care providers spread across this vast country, but we didn’t, and now here we are.

If we as health advocates and community members are more aware of how confusion is used as a political tactic, then we may be better able to respond to it and organize against it. We need to hold leaders to account for the harms created by confusion and challenge them to demonstrat­e that they aren’t benefiting politicall­y from uncertaint­y as we grapple with finding our way out of this crisis.

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 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Toronto nurse Amanda Alves, seated, greets Premier Doug Ford, centre, and Toronto Mayor John Tory during a tour of Toronto’s mass vaccinatio­n clinic with Dr. Eileen de Villa. Many Ontario doctors feel uninformed about the vaccine rollout.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Toronto nurse Amanda Alves, seated, greets Premier Doug Ford, centre, and Toronto Mayor John Tory during a tour of Toronto’s mass vaccinatio­n clinic with Dr. Eileen de Villa. Many Ontario doctors feel uninformed about the vaccine rollout.
 ?? Department of family medicine. ??
Department of family medicine.

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