Trust, transparency key for Manitobans to accept decisions on who gets vaccine first: experts - Action News
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Manitoba

Trust, transparency key for Manitobans to accept decisions on who gets vaccine first: experts

Health experts say the choices will likely leave some people feeling dissatisfied, and convincing them to accept the priority list depends on getting them to trust the decision-making process.

Government must be clear and consistent when explaining why certain groups are chosen over others

A nurse gives a volunteer trial participant an experimental COVID-19 vaccine. With a vaccine expected to be approved for use in Canada soon, Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister fears some Manitobans will not have access to the first round of vaccination. (Hans Pennink/The Associated Press)

Once a COVID-19 vaccine is approved in Canada, provincial health leaders face the difficult choice of who should get it first.

Health experts say those choices will likely leave some people feeling dissatisfied, but convincing them to accept the priority list depends on getting them to trust the decision-making process.

"They need to be communicating it with as much transparency as possible," said Michelle Driedger, a professor in the department of community health sciences at the University of Manitoba.

While the federal government is in charge of acquiring the vaccine, the provinces have the responsibility of deciding how to get it into people's arms.

There will be differences in the execution of the immunization campaign because provinces have different challenges and resources, but there should be no variationin who gets priority access to the first doses, saidFranoise Baylis, a medical ethics researcher at Dalhousie University.

"I truly believe if we cannot do that, we will undermine the trust that we need to deal with this public health crisis," she said.

A worker packs boxes with dry ice as Brussels International Airport and its partners prepare for the massive logistic operation of carrying new COVID-19 vaccines and vaccine candidates through the airport. Manitoba already has one freezer capable of storing vaccines at extremely low temperatures a requirement for one of the frontrunners for approval. (Johanna Geron/Reuters)

No vaccine has yet been approved for use in Canada, but once that happens, the countryis expected to receive enough vaccine doses for roughly three million people within the first three months of 2021.

On Friday, theNational Advisory Committee on Immunization thefederal committee tasked with planning the rollout of the vaccine across the country recommended that residents and staff in long-term care homes should get the first doses, followed by all Canadians over the age of 80.

The government of Manitoba hascreated a task force to plan for the immunization campaign here, which is "currently working with federal, provincial and territorial counterparts on priorities for COVID-19 vaccination," a spokesperson for the provincial government said in a statement.

It's guided by the national committee's"recently-released recommendations on key populations, and our previous experiences with pandemic response and vaccination campaigns," the spokesperson said.

Manitoba has enough supplies to administer two doses of the vaccine to every resident, Premier Brian Pallistersaid this week. A freezer capable ofstoringvaccinesat extremely low temperatures a requirement for the vaccine from Pfizer, one of the front-runners for approval has been delivered and installed, with another four on the way, he said. Togetherthey can hold about one million doses of vaccine.

The province has purchased 20 portable ultra-cold freezers so that, asthe vaccine supply from the federal government expands over the coming months, it can be stored and made widely available.

What about Indigenous people?

After long-term care residents and seniors have been vaccinated, the federal advisory committee recommends that front-line health workers get it next, followed by people living in remote Indigenous communities.

That last recommendation led Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister to questionwho is responsiblefor gettingthe vaccine to those communities.

On Thursday, Pallister said the federal government planned to hold back a portion of Manitoba's allotment of vaccines for First Nations, which he claimed would leaveManitoba with fewer doses for the rest of its population compared to other provinces, due to the higher proportion of First Nations people in the province.

"We need the federal government to recognize our unique needs here by providing an additional allocation of vaccines for Manitobans to use in First Nations communities first ... because this is their constitutional responsibility," he said.

WATCH| Pallister calls on feds to provide extra vaccine doses for First Nations:

Manitoba premier calls on feds to provide extra COVID-19 vaccine doses for First Nations

4 years ago
Duration 4:44
Premier Brian Pallister says a federal proposal to reserve a portion of Manitoba's vaccine allotment for First Nations would leave the province with the least number of doses for the rest of the population.

Driedger says Pallister's concerns don't take into account the many Mtis communities that exist alongsidemany First Nations.

"Particularly in the more remote northern or remote and isolated communities in many instances, you'll have a First Nations reserve and you'll have Mtis communities in very close proximity," she said.

"Those Mtis citizensare experiencing much of the same kinds of socioeconomic and other barriers to access."

Clarity,consistency foster trust

Whoever governments ultimately choose to receive the first vaccine doses, the list of early recipients needs to be consistent across the country, "so that Canadians are not being treated differently by virtue of geography," Baylis said.

"What we're looking at here is a commitment to justice, a commitment to minimizing harm, a desire to build trust amongst Canadians," she said.

Federal, provincial and territorial leaders will need to sit down and come to an agreement about who gets the vaccine first. That decision needs to be based on solid scientific and ethical reasons, and those reasons need to be clearly communicated to the public, she said.

Pfizer's vaccine, which requires two doses and must be stored at -70 C, is likely to be the first COVID-19 vaccine approved in Canada. (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)

In Canada, a commonly used framework for making decisions about vaccine programs was developed in 2004 by three researchers at the University of Montreal.

In addition to practical considerations about the cost and feasibility of developing a vaccine, the framework lists a number of questions that decision makers must answer regarding issues of equity and ethics.

It asks, for example, whether the program is "equitable in terms of accessibility of the vaccine for all target groups" including the most vulnerable populations.

Research has shown that being clear about why certain groups have received priority over others goes a long way to reducing conflict over the decision, Driedger said.

"Even if they're not happy with the ultimate decision, as long as they understand the process and they have confidence that the process is being done fairly, then for the most part, people can accept that," she said.