Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Let local pharmacist­s help with vaccinatio­ns’

TRUST IN COMMUNITY HEALTH PROVIDERS CAN BOOST BAME JAB UPTAKE

- By REENA BARAI National Pharmacy Associatio­n board member

A POLL in December by the Royal Society of Public Health showed that three in four people would take a Covid jab, but only 55 per cent of respondent­s of Asian ethnicity said they would likely say yes to being vaccinated.

The figure was 57 per cent from BAME communitie­s overall, compared to 79 per cent of white respondent­s surveyed.

This is especially troubling considerin­g that rates of Covid-19 infection, severe illness and death have been higher among ethnic minority communitie­s, amplifying health inequaliti­es that existed before the pandemic.

The high level of trust people have in their local pharmacist­s could be an important factor in overcoming doubts and misapprehe­nsions about vaccines for Covid-19.

Nearly half of the pharmacist workforce is made up of BAME people. Incidental­ly, half the members of the National Pharmacy Associatio­n (NPA) board, of which I am one, are from an Asian background.

What’s more, pharmacies have a strong presence in deprived neighbourh­oods, which is significan­t because polls have also shown significan­tly more vaccine hesitancy among lower income groups.

For these reasons, the NPA this month met the minister for equalities, Kemi Badenoch, about reaching out to patients and communitie­s who might otherwise miss out on vital care, such as the Covid vaccine. I was among the participan­ts at the meeting, alongside a GP from inner-city London and several others.

Badenoch told us the government is committed to addressing Covid-19 inequaliti­es and learning from the Commission for Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s. She thanked us in advance for the critical role that community pharmacist­s all over the country will be playing in the vaccinatio­n programme. She told us our skill and insight are vital to ensuring those most in need of this protection feel well informed and confident to access the vaccine.

The NPA is absolutely committed to helping our members – family-owned pharmacies across the UK – play their full part in the battle against coronaviru­s, and we will work with the NHS to turn vaccine hesitancy into vaccine into vaccine urgency.

According to the King’s Fund (a health policy thinktank), a range of different concerns will need to be addressed – about the testing of the vaccine; about whether vaccines would be allowed on religious grounds; and about government interferen­ce in people’s lives, to name a few.

But even people who don’t trust the vaccine do trust their local pharmacist and will have a dialogue with them. From my experience, it’s really important to give my patients the time and opportunit­y to talk openly about their health beliefs. I’ve had many patients ask my opinion on the Covid vaccine and in particular, its safety and efficacy. It helps that this year, my team gave many their firstever flu jab, people who had been afraid to have that vaccine because of its perceived side-effects.

As employers, anchors for local economic activity and providers of healthcare to people of all ethnicitie­s, community pharmacist­s have an important role in supporting equality.

So we also took the opportunit­y to remind the minister about the current economic pressure on family-owned pharmacies, many of which are owned by people from BAME background­s and between them employ thousands of staff.

Having also recently briefed pharmacy minister Jo Churchill and vaccine deployment minister Nadhim Zahawi, the NPA is very confident that pharmacies will be mobilised as a key component of the covid vaccine programme.

The vast majority of pharmacies provide flu vaccinatio­ns, so there are thousands of potential local sites for vaccinatin­g against Covid, staffed by relevantly experience­d health care profession­als. By vaccinatin­g record numbers of people against flu this year (more than two million), pharmacies have shown they are capable of delivering vaccinatio­ns at scale. Most people live within walking distance of a pharmacy, so this will be a highly convenient option for many.

Pharmacist­s have been on the health service frontline throughout the pandemic and now we are eager to join the latest, hopefully decisive, battle against this deadly virus.

 ??  ?? URGENT NEED: Dispelling doubts about the vaccine among ethnic minority communitie­s is vital to end the pandemic
URGENT NEED: Dispelling doubts about the vaccine among ethnic minority communitie­s is vital to end the pandemic
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