Toronto Star

InclusiveH­ealthCare Is Crucial for this Year’s Flu Season

- Zahir Hirji, President, Infection Prevention & Control Canada (IPAC Canada)

While Canadians are grappling with increasing COVID-19 cases across the country, during this enervating time many health care workers are already wondering and planning for what the impending influenza season will be like.

The overwhelmi­ng focus on health care over the past 18 months has highlighte­d many health care inequities and disparitie­s across Canada. As a country, we will be remiss if we don’t learn and apply the lessons from COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on, uptake, and acceptance and apply them to the flu campaign. Specifical­ly, we must focus on the polarizing effects of COVID-19 on Black and Indigenous communitie­s in Canada. Influenza vaccine has traditiona­lly had lower effectiven­ess than what has been achieved with the current COVID-19 vaccines. With current surveillan­ce systems that don’t track influenza cases with the same clarity and the lack of race-based informatio­n, many questions remain.

The minimal influenza season of 2020 to 2021 may leave a higher level of susceptibi­lity in Canadians, further supporting the rationale to get vaccinated. The value of being vaccinated has been well-illustrate­d in some of Canada’s most vulnerable population­s, like long-term care residents. Great work is being done in many jurisdicti­ons to develop equity-centered health care practices that are informed by culturally-safe guidance. In particular, building trusting relationsh­ips requires time and patience. Health care workers need to be aware of and acknowledg­e past traumatic experience­s. In a 2012 study researcher­s reported lower vaccinatio­ns rates amongst Black people in Canada compared to other ethnic groups. In 2021, the situation remains unchanged. A recent report from Public Health Ontario highlights the disproport­ion in COVID-19 cases amongst Black people in Canada compared to the overall population. We have a unique opportunit­y, right now while Canadians are listening, to offer access to resources, to leverage local successes with COVID-19 vaccine programs to bolster influenza vaccinatio­n initiative­s, and to build structures that will continue to prioritize the health care needs of Black, Indigenous, and people of colour in Canada. We know that flu vaccinatio­ns remain one of the best ways to protect yourself and your loved ones against flu and its potentiall­y serious complicati­ons.

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