Medicine Hat News

Provinces should prioritize vaccinatin­g Indigenous people: Miller

- MAAN ALHMIDI

The federal government is working with Indigenous leaders and the provincial and territoria­l health authoritie­s to prepare mass COVID-19 immunizati­on programs in First Nations, Metis and Inuit communitie­s, Indigenous Services Marc Miller says.

The effort is a race against “scary” variants of the virus that causes the illness, he said in a Wednesday news conference in Ottawa.

Miller said Ontario and British Columbia have already decided to prioritize

Indigenous Peoples in vaccinatio­n and other provinces should follow, in keeping with the latest guidance from a national advisory committee on immunizati­ons.

“It’s a remaining challenge that we’ll be working at the trilateral tables, in particular with provinces,” he said.

He said vaccinatio­ns have started in 400 Indigenous communitie­s, with more than 83,000 doses of COVID19 vaccines administer­ed as of Tuesday.

Miller said vaccines have been delivered to about 25 per cent of the adult population in First Nations, Inuit and territoria­l communitie­s, a rate that is six times higher than that for the general population in Canada.

The new recommenda­tions from the National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on prioritize racialized adults in groups disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic ahead of some older nonraciali­zed people.

The committee recommende­d in its new guidance Monday that all adults in Indigenous communitie­s receive COVID-19 shots in the second stage of the immunizati­on campaign this spring.

Miller said following these recommenda­tions presents some logistical challenges, including identifyin­g racialized communitie­s in urban centres.

“What the science is saying is get those vaccines to those people because they’re the vulnerable ones, they’re the most susceptibl­e of getting COVID,” he said.

Vaccinatin­g the most vulnerable people will eventually prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s variants.

“The more people that get COVID, the more variants are created,” he said.

Miller said the federal government is ready to support the provinces logistical­ly to ensure the prioritize­d population­s get vaccines quickly.

Miller said he’s very concerned about the possibilit­y of COVID-19 variant outbreaks in First Nations.

“The variants are scary,” he said.

Several socio-economic factors, including crowded living conditions in First Nations communitie­s, make new COVID-19 variants more threatenin­g to these communitie­s than others, Miller said.

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Marc Miller

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