Toronto's Black community has 'hit a wall' in getting vaccinated, scientists' task force warns - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto's Black community has 'hit a wall' in getting vaccinated, scientists' task force warns

While Ontario refocuses its efforts on what the provincial government calls the "last mile" of its vaccination strategy, a group of prominent Black organizations is warning the push to immunize Black communities is nowhere near the finish line.

Community could see an increase in cases, hospitalizations and deaths, Dr. David Burt says

Akwatu Khenti, chair of the Black Scientists Task Force on Vaccine Equity, is urging more Black residents to get vaccinated against COVID-19. (Adam Coish/University of Toronto)

While Ontario refocuses its efforts on what the provincial government calls the"last mile" of its vaccination strategy, a group of prominent Black organizations iswarning the pushto immunizeBlack communities is nowhere near the finish line.

Toronto's Black Scientists' Task Forceon Vaccine Equity says itworriesBlack residents may have "hit a wall" in getting vaccinated, because in some neighbourhoods with thehighest Black populations, less than half of adults are fully immunized.

According to Dr. David Burt,a task force member and immunologist, Black residents make upabout nine percent of the Greater Toronto Area'spopulation, butthey make up20 to30 per cent ofthe population inunder-vaccinated postal codes, and are more likely to be exposed to COVID-19 than their white peers, especially to the much more transmissible delta variant.

"Although a high percentage of people in the Black community hashad a first dose, we know that one dose will not give you strong enough protection against this variant," Burt told CBCNews.

He said the lack of vaccinations isa "worrying trend" that could result in a higher proportion of Black patients hospitalized or seriously ill after contracting COVID-19. This also happened in August 2020, he said, when the Black community accounted for30 per cent of the city's COVID cases.

As a result, the task forceheld 25 town hall sessions throughout the year to educate community members on vaccines, which had "effectively reduced hesitancy and mistrust" around them.

However, the group says, attendance at the meetings has dropped significantly in recent weeks at both town halls and mobile clinics.

"It's important that the community gets vaccinated fully now that the variants are here, otherwise we're going to see an increase of severe disease, hospitalizations and, unfortunately, death," Burt said.

'We need to go to them'

Burt saidthe Black community ismore hesitant about the vaccine for several reasons, including mistrust of medical professionals, misinformation being shared on social media and questions over the efficacy of the vaccines themselves.

Eight otherfront-line Black community organizations supportthe task force's findings.

Task force chair Dr. Akwatu Khenti echoed Burt'sconcerns, saying "right now we are positioned to go back where we were last August."

"We have vaccinated everyone who wants to get a vaccine and now we are dealing with the truly vaccine hesitant as well as the vaccine resistant," Khenti said.

"These are the people who don't go to town halls and don't read newspapers every single day. Many of them have two and three jobs and their lives are really preoccupied with work and paying the bills because they earn so little that that's their main priority," he added.

Closeup of a hand holding a bottle of influenza vaccine, with a syringe plunged into it.
Mobile clinics and outreach initiatives have increased in recent weeks to immunize people who've been hesitant to get their shots. (Robert Short/CBC)

The only solution, Khenti said, isto "intensify" a grass-roots approach that involves pop-up clinics and community members visiting people at home.

"We need to go to them. Everyone who can and is able to has come to us," he said.

"Anybody who can put a needle in an arm should be part of this effort."

Community outreach improving numbers

Mobile clinics and outreach initiatives have increased in recent weeks across the cityto divert resources to strategies that focus on communities where fewer people have gotten the shots.

Woodgreen Community Services, for example,has held pop-up vaccine clinics and has been running door-knocking campaigns to get doses into arms in communities that have trouble accessing their first or second shots.

Nadjib Alamyar, Woodgreen's manager for newcomer wellness, says his team, which focuses on the Taylor-Massey neighbourhood,located north of Danforth Avenue between Main Street and Victoria Park Avenue, hasseen "really positive results" from the initiative.

The organization recruits local ambassadors, which include neighbours and individuals who live in the same building, to start the conversation with other residents.

He said 20 to 30 per cent of those visiting vaccine clinics were now doing so for their first dose, a sign that the community outreach was getting through to people.

"It makes a huge difference when you see someone at your door, someone who looks like you, who is of your community and it really makes a difference when you see your neighbours knocking on your door encouraging you to get vaccinated," he said.

He said building "a more trusting relationship" with residents means that62.6 per cent of eligible residents now havetheir first dose of a COVID-19vaccine in the Taylor-Massey neighbourhood, while 56.5 per cent have had their second dose.

Dr. Vinita Dubey, Torontos associate medical officer of health, says many people have been having trouble getting access to vaccines. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Toronto Public Health data shows that city-wide, 73.1 per cent of the population have gotten their first shotand 67.2 per cent now have both doses.

Toronto'sAssociate Medical Officer of HealthDr. Vinita Dubeysaid the city had been working closely with community partners to understand why people are "hesitant or unable to get vaccinated", and said staff had found access to vaccines had been identified as a barrier.

She said many residents were having difficulty finding time away from work to get vaccinated, whileothers, such as seniors, cannot physically get themselves to appointments or "face technical barriers" in the booking process.

She said the cityunderstood that a "community-led" approach was the best way to serve the Black community.

"TPH acknowledges that there has also been historical mistrust of health-care, including the experience of racism, especially among racialized populations which impacts their confidence with accessing vaccinations.

"Community ambassadors are providing hands on, active follow up with community members, including many areas of the city with higher proportions of Black residents, assisting them to navigate registrations systems, correct misinformation, direct community members to clinics, and sharing information about additional community resources."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)