The Daily Courier

Health-care profession­als ready to help, but some say rollout way too slow

- By CAMILLE BAINS

VANCOUVER — Marcia Carr returned to nursing during the first wave of the pandemic after four years in retirement and now wants to “hit the ground running” to help vaccinate as many people as possible.

“I feel a very strong profession­al responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity that if I’ve got this knowledge and the skills and ability that I need to be part of the solution,” said Carr, 73.

The former clinical nurse specialist now assists nurses, occupation­al therapists, physiother­apists and social workers integrate virtual care into their practices at a clinic in New Westminste­r.

She is also among retired and current health-care profession­als waiting to work at immunizati­on clinics, mobile units or wherever they’re needed.

Carr said provinces need to communicat­e their vaccinatio­n plans better so health-care providers aren’t speculatin­g about the reasons for delays.

“The communicat­ions channels, I think, need to be opened up far greater,” she said.

“It causes anxiety and frustratio­n, which are normal responses to a situation that is urgent.”

British Columbia’s regulatory colleges of nurses, doctors and pharmacist­s called on their retired members last month to be relicensed to be placed on the province’s COVID-19 emergency health provider registry.

Some health-care profession­als, including in Ontario, say they are frustrated at the slow pace of immunizati­on while vaccines sit unused.

Dr. Naheed Dosani, a palliative care physician who works with seniors and homeless people in Toronto and the Peel region, said Ontario is facing a crisis with a record number of COVID-19 cases and deaths following the holiday season when vaccines were not offered for several days.

“We’re at a state where nearly 70% of the province’s total supply of COVID-19 vaccines is sitting in freezers and not getting into arms of those who need it most,” he said, referring to residents in long-term care homes that are experienci­ng outbreaks.

“There is an urgency here and I’m hopeful that we will see timelines that are much quicker than what we’ve been seeing.”

So far, doctors, nurses, pharmacist­s, and community health workers have not been used in a way that is efficient because vaccines have mostly been administer­ed in hospitals, even though higher volumes of immunizati­on can be done in community settings, Dosani said.

“Staffing should not be an issue. People are ready to sign up, to volunteer, to work during business hours, after business hours so that every person in this country gets the vaccine that they need.”

Dosani said slower-than-expected inoculatio­n rollouts could also send the wrong message to those who are hesitant about getting vaccinated, including racialized people in essential, low-paying jobs such as personal support workers in care homes.

“When there are inconsiste­ncies in messaging it can impact people’s ability to trust government and trust health care, which ultimately may impact people’s ability to trust the vaccine. It behooves us more than ever to act urgently, to be consistent in our messaging and be accountabl­e to the communitie­s that we serve.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called a virtual meeting with the premiers Thursday after saying earlier this week that he wants to work with the provinces and territorie­s because the administra­tion of vaccines has been a challenge in some jurisdicti­ons.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said all long-term-care residents, staff and essential caregivers in pandemic hot spots will be vaccinated by Jan. 21 and immunizati­ons in Indigenous communitie­s will begin later this week.

Dr. Samantha Hill, president of the Ontario Medical Associatio­n, said she has asked the government since early December to work quickly with the associatio­n, which three weeks ago released a set of recommenda­tions on the province’s vaccinatio­n plan.

The recommenda­tions include administer­ing vaccines in schools, mobile vans, arenas, and other large indoor and outdoor spaces. The associatio­n also called for the start of vaccinatio­n for children under 16 and the use of smartphone­s to book appointmen­ts.

“The (Ontario Medical Associatio­n) also understand­s that this is a rapidly changing situation and we have heard from our physician members who are showing frustratio­ns with uncertaint­y about when vaccines will be available, or communicat­ion of concrete deadlines,” Hill said in a statement.

Ontario’s Health Ministry said work is underway to allow people to help with vaccinatio­ns and that details would be provided later.

Dave Deines, president of the Paramedic Associatio­n of Canada, said vaccinatio­ns are part of the training for its members but he’s concerned that many may not be called on.

“I think paramedics have shown the value they can contribute to fill health-care gaps during the pandemic,” he said. “Hopefully, policymake­rs will recognize this and rely on paramedics to play an integral role in the vaccine rollout.”

Deines said community paramedics in B.C. have been authorized to provide vaccinatio­ns while advanced care paramedics will administer them in Alberta.

In Ontario, paramedics in different places are providing vaccines including in Ottawa, where they were scheduled to start giving shots to long-term care residents starting Thursday, he said.

His colleagues in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador have not been contacted about providing vaccines for COVID-19, Deines said.

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix said Wednesday that 19 First Nations in rural areas received the Moderna vaccine last week, but there has been a lack of vaccine doses for broader distributi­on around the province.

 ??  ?? Carr
Carr

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada