How Brampton went from a COVID-19 hotspot to one of Canada's most vaccinated communities - Action News
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How Brampton went from a COVID-19 hotspot to one of Canada's most vaccinated communities

The success Brampton and Peel Region have had in getting COVID-19 shots in arms isn't just due to efforts by regional public health officials. Community groups also had a big role in communicating with the region's many diverse cultural groups in their own languages.

This time last year average daily cases in Peel were 10 times higher than they are now

People receive their COVID-19 vaccine at the 'hockey hub' mass vaccination facility at the CAA Centre during the COVID-19 pandemic in Brampton, Ont., on Friday, June 4, 2021. This NHL-sized hockey rink is one of Canada's largest vaccination centres. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

After a dark period last year as a nationwide COVID-19 hotspot, Brampton and Peel Region haveemerged as one of the most vaccinated communities in the country.

As of Friday, 86 per cent of residents 12 and older in Peel Region are fully vaccinated, and 90 per cent of residents 12 and older have had a first shot. The regionnow sees an average of 40 cases per day.This time last year, that number was more than 10 times higher.

"I think that speaks to how our community has stepped up," said PeelChief Medical Officer Dr. Lawrence Loh.

Hesays the waya diverse region facing critical language and social barriers came together to getshots into arms is a major story.

"It's been a whole community effort that's actually made the difference in getting to our large vaccination rates," he told CBC News.

While that effort started with public health staff working 24/7, andmunicipal, regional, and provincial governments mandating masks and vaccine certificates, Loh says, it alsoinvolved a collaborationbetween Peel Public Health and local groups like Indus Community Services, Punjabi Community Health Services, Roots Community Services, and many more.

Community groups were 'indefatigable'

Other organizations, likethe Canadian Muslim COVID-19 Task Force, the South Asian COVID-19 Task Force, the Latin American COVID-19 Task Force andthe Black Health Task Force,informed their respective communities about the virus, testingand vaccinations in languages that residents spoke, from sources they trusted.

"They were indefatigable ... They were going door-to-door setting up bookings and transportation networks to get people to go to clinics, working with usto set up mobile clinics," Loh said.

"That was actually really a big secret to our success," he added.

The groupshelped removewhat Loh describes as "hard barriers," like finding time off work, or getting to a clinic, or speaking to a doctor or nurse in a familiar language. He says once those barriers were removed, vaccinations increased.

"Many new Canadians, racialized populationshave connections to places where other vaccine-preventable diseases are fairly prevalent ... They have a healthy respect for the science and effectiveness behind vaccines," Loh said.

"So you see a greater willingness to act, to take the vaccine where there can be access provided."

Several members of the core team of the Canadian Muslim COVID-19 Task Force have roots in or currently live in Peel Region and Brampton. (Submitted by Hashim Khan)

Dr. Hashim Khan, the co-chair of the Canadian Muslim COVID-19 Task Force, saysMuslim doctors and imams came together to discuss the impact the virus would have not just on Muslims in Peel, but across Canada.

"We knew our communities had a lot of risk factors like multi-generational homes, essential work, lower levels of health literacythat would contribute to the spread of the virus," Khan said.

'We wanted to clear misconceptions'

The Brampton Islamic Centre was one of the mosques that offered vaccine clinicsthrough a collaboration betweenthe Canadian Muslim COVID-19 Task Forceand Peel Public Health.

"We're already having conversations about how to roll out again for kids," Khan said, referring to vaccinations for children aged five to 11.

In November of last year, when daily cases in Brampton were at their highest, Dr. Raj Grewal co-founded the South Asian COVID-19 Task Force with other physicians to combat not only misinformation but also false perceptions.

"We had our community disproportionately affected by COVID-19, and the media was saying the South Asians aren't listening to the rules, they're not observing lockdown, and all these things," he said.

"We wanted to clear those misconceptions, and educate our community," Grewal added.

They developed messaging via social media, started education campaigns, and began informing the community in their own languages.

Out of their efforts came a testing centre and vaccination clinic run by physicians and nurses whospoke familiar languages like Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu, and others, located at the Embassy Grand Convention Centre in Brampton, which has now become one of the largest testing centres and vaccine clinics in the province.

Dr. Raj Grewal is a co-founder of the South Asian COVID-19 Task Force and part of the This Is Our Shot campaign. (Submitted by Raj Grewal)

The task force also worked with ethnic media, local Punjabi and Hindi language TV channels, and even WhatsApp to disseminate information about COVID-19, testing, and vaccinations targeting a South Asian audience.

That work was done in collaboration with the Region of Peel.

"We didn't do it by ourselves, we did it with the help of the Region of Peel, Dr. Lawrence Loh.They did an incredible job partnering with us," Grewal said. "That was really a key to the success."

Grewal cited a study by Boston Consulting Group, which was hired to measure the impact of the work done by the campaign.

"What they found, which was pretty remarkable, was that the South Asian population had one of the most dramatic reductions in vaccine hesitancy in the country," Grewal said.

"It really shows you how impactful those non-traditional methods of getting the word out was."

With files from Nav Nanwa