Community-based nurses, doctors feeling 'invisible' during pandemic - Action News
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Community-based nurses, doctors feeling 'invisible' during pandemic

Some nurses and doctors working on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ottawa's communities say they feel left out of the narrative, and invisible to government and public health officials making decisions about the vaccine rollout.

Primary care workers say they're facing same risks as counterparts in hospitals

A tired-looking female health-care worker wearing medical scrubs, a medical mask and rubber gloves, with a stethoscope around her neck, leans against an outdoor wall in the sunshine, which casts her shadow.
Some nurses and doctors working in primary care say they're feeling left out of the discussion during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially about the vaccine rollout. (Alliance Images/Shutterstock)

Some nurses and doctors working on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ottawa's communities say they feel left out of the narrative, and invisible to government and public health officials making decisions about the vaccine rollout.

Emily Rodney, a registered practical nurse in Ottawa who specializes in diabetic footcare, has been making house calls during the pandemic.

"I definitely feel invisible," Rodney said. "I just think because we're not under that government funding, we just get lost."

We're left out of the conversation, and that harms the community.- Dr. Nili Kaplan-Myrth, Ottawa family physician

Rodney saidcommunity-basedhealth-care professionals face the same risks fromCOVID-19 as their counterparts in hospitals, some of whom were first in line to get vaccinated in Ottawa.

As of Friday, the province's phased vaccine schedule doesn't explicitly state when primary care workers can get vaccinated, but generally states health-care workers will get their turn sometime in or after January. Front-line essential workers and those who care for people with high-risk chronic conditions are scheduled for vaccination in Phase 2,between March and July.

"We have a big impact in the community, but in the government's eyes I think we're just very small," Rodney said.

She saidher patients, many of whom are elderly and isolated, rely on her not just for health care, but for their social and mental well-being. They also look to her for answers.

"I feel bad when I don't have more information for them as to when they'll possibly get vaccinated, or even when I might," Rodneysaid. "It's just an awful position."

Emily Rodney is a registered practical nurse in Ottawa who cares for patients in their homes. (Submitted by Emily Rodney)

Heather Camrass, executive director of the Community Nursing Registry of Ottawa, saidher primary role during the pandemic is making sure the registry's members have as much information as possible.

She saidit's still not clear to her where primary care providers fit into the vaccination plan.

"They fit somewhere, but it's not obvious," said Camrass. That uncertainty adds stress to their already taxing jobsand give them the sense that"they're out there on their own," she said.

"There's a lot fear, a lot of anxiety," Camrass said. "It's the fear of the unknown that makes it worse."

Family doctor feels 'disposable'

Dr. Nili Kaplan-Myrth, a family physician in downtown Ottawa, saidshe tried to volunteer to vaccinate people, but was turned away. Well into the new year, she says family doctors still don't have a "plan on the ground" forvaccinating patients.

"We're so left out of this picture that it's just kind of mind-boggling," said Kaplan-Myrth. "We're left out of the conversation, and that harms the community."

WATCH | Family doctor says she feels public health officials 'don't care' about her sector:

Primary care physicians feel a sense of invisibility in vaccine rollout

4 years ago
Duration 0:53
Dr. Nili Kaplan-Myrth says theres no indication when family doctors might start receiving the COVID-19 vaccine despite being a critical part of the countrys healthcare system.

To Kaplan-Myrth,primary care is the backbone of the health-care system.

"And you want us to wait [until] when? Like, April?" she asked."It's the sense of we're disposable, we're dispensable. They don't care."

She saidthere's a disconnect between what officials are saying and what's actually happening on the ground,and that's taking a toll on her patients' well-being.

"[That's]one of the most exhausting and frustrating things," she said. "This is life and death."

'Nature of the beast,' says doctor

Meanwhile, family physician Dr. Alison Eyre says she's satisfiedwith the efforts ofpublic health officials.

Eyre, who works out of theCentretown Community Health Centre, saidprovincial and local officials have contacted her, and she's taken part in severalmeetings about community vaccine rollout. It's still in the works, she said.

"The rollout hasn't been figured out yet, and there's huge frustration ... [but] no one was given a playbook on how to do this," said Eyre. "It is slow and the communications are slow, and we're just starting to learn about it. I do think that's the nature of the beast."

WATCH |Family doctor says rollout delays are'nature of the beast':

She doesn't fully agree with how the first vaccine doseswere distributed mainly in and through hospitals but she said she understands why those decisions were made.

OPH says it's waiting for more info

In an emailed statement, Ottawa Public Health (OPH) saidit's waiting for more information from the province about the role community health-care workers will playin vaccine delivery, but is already working with a sub-group of local workers to plan their future involvement.

"OPH has offered the opportunity to community physicians to participate in the vaccination campaign and to date, more than 300 physicians have expressed interest in participating," it said.

CBC News has contacted the province's Ministry of Health for comment and is waiting to hear back.

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