Media releases

  • Brock immunologist calls for national conversation to reach the unvaccinated

    MEDIA RELEASE: 9 July 2021 – R0076

    Estimating Canada may need to achieve a vaccination rate of close to 90 per cent for the population to be fully protected, Brock University immunologist Adam MacNeil is calling for a “national conversation” to reach Canadians reluctant to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

    The Associate Professor of Immunology says that while there are a number of authoritative sources providing reliable information in the media and elsewhere, and Canadians have a relatively high vaccination rate, it’s not high enough to achieve herd immunity.

    “We are at a pivot point and need to elevate and disseminate the conversation into communities, leveraging all of our experts and their messages to create one unified, culturally-sensitive national voice that will reach those pockets of people who are hesitant because of misinformation or perhaps for ideological reasons,” MacNeil says.

    This national conversation could be in the form of a televised countrywide town hall meeting, he says.

    This should be accompanied by a “boots on the ground” campaign of more pop-up clinics, door-to-door canvassing, physicians and pharmacists reaching out to their patients, and other measures to break down logistical and information barriers for the vaccine-hesitant.

    He urges individuals to reach out to reluctant family members, neighbours, colleagues and others in their personal networks to provide support for vaccination.

    Trust is key to changing the minds of those hesitating to be vaccinated, MacNeil says.

    “I don’t think just pounding on the table saying, ‘vaccines work, you have to get it,’ is the solution in those cases,” he says. “It comes from genuine conversations with people they trust.”

    A little more than 75 per cent of eligible Canadians have received at least a first dose of a COVID vaccine, with more than 40 per cent double-dosed. But with the arrival of variants such as Delta and Lambda, and the approaching school year, MacNeil estimates full protection of the population may require Canada to reach a vaccination rate of close to 90 per cent.

    “We need to position ourselves with the highest possible level of herd immunity, so that we can mitigate the challenge that we’re going to see this fall — and it is coming,” he says. “Second doses are enormously important in establishing the most protective level of immunity. Let’s make it a two-dose summer for everyone.”

    There are a variety of reasons why people are reluctant to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. Some want to get the jab but might not have the technology or know-how to book an appointment or can’t afford the time off work to get the shot or recover from potential side-effects.

    Language and cultural barriers are an issue in some communities, while mistrust of the medical profession and misinformation in general might stop others. Some people are afraid that they will be among the minority of cases experiencing severe reactions.

    A few might believe that these vaccines don’t actually work, a point MacNeil is particularly passionate about refuting. He points to numbers from Ontario’s new Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore indicating that between May 15 and June 12, nearly 99 per cent of COVID cases involved individuals who were not fully vaccinated.

    “#VaccinesWork,” MacNeil says.

    He says there is a small group deeply embedded in COVID-19 conspiracy theories and those who are hard-core anti-vaxxers; most efforts to reach those people are wasted, but there are large pockets that are absolutely reachable.

    And for those who believe that if everyone around them is vaccinated, they don’t need to get the vaccine themselves because they’re protected?

    “There just isn’t a lot of room for people to rest on the investments of others,” MacNeil says.

    “Your community includes vulnerable people who, for various reasons, can’t get the vaccines. That includes all children less than 12 years old, people who are immuno-compromised and those who have had various types of medical conditions or recent surgeries and require immune-suppressant medications,” he says.

    “If you’re a person who can get a vaccine, make the altruistic decision to protect your whole community. It’s about ‘Team Canada,’ your family, your neighbour; it’s about creating a safe country for us to live in, and that takes all of us.”

    Adam MacNeil, Associate Professor of Immunology at Brock University, is available for media interviews about the need to reach Canada’s unvaccinated population.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Maryanne St. Denis, Writer/Web Editor, Brock University mstdenis@brocku.ca or 905-246-0256

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Work must be done to offer all children same protection: Brock experts

    MEDIA RELEASE: 29 June 2021 – R0075

    Faculty members and students in Brock University’s Department of Child and Youth Studies are focused on researching and improving the lives of children.

    As the group has watched the unfolding tragedy of the location of more and more mass graves resulting from Canada’s residential school system, how children have historically been harmed under the auspices of professionalized care is even more painfully obvious.

    “Not all children and youth in Canada have been afforded the same protections, respect or attention and that needs to change,” says Professor Rebecca Raby. “Within our department there’s a commitment to the welfare of children and to really understanding children’s lives and how we can make their lives better.

    “The experiences of many Indigenous children both the in the past and present really point to how much work we have to do and how there are serious inequalities and injustices in Canada around how we treat children and youth.”

    Last fall, the department hosted McGill Professor and First Nations Child and Family Caring Society Executive Director Cindy Blackstock for a speaking engagement.

    That talk added to growing discussions among faculty around acknowledging Indigenous issues and the department launched their Reconciliation, Decolonization and Indigenization Committee earlier this year.

    This week, the department published an open letter in response to the increasing number of mass graves being located at former residential schools.

    In it, they say they share the grief and anger that has arisen in response to these mass graves and want to see it lead to action.

    “We urge the Canadian government to address the Calls to Action 71-76 of the 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which include locating and documenting the children who died in residential schools,” the group writes in the letter, which has been sent to the Niagara daily newspapers to be published and can be found in full below.

    Raby, speaking on behalf of the committee, says the time is overdue for educational institutions to be thinking more about what role they can play in reconciliation.

    “We need to teach our students to be able to think about these issues and better serve Indigenous children and communities in our teaching and research,” she says. “And we need to better educate everybody about historic and ongoing injustices towards Indigenous children and their consequences.”

    While the letter doesn’t reference the ongoing debate over Canada Day celebrations, Raby says the conversation is an important one.

    “This is an opportunity to reflect on things that are important and valuable about the nation of Canada,” she says. “But things about Canada’s creation and as an ongoing entity are deeply troubling, so how do we wrestle with that? I think that personally it would be good for people to recognize and respect why some people may not want to celebrate Canada.”

    Rebecca Raby, Professor in the Department of Child and Youth Studies at Brock University, is available for media interviews on behalf of the department’s Reconciliation, Decolonization and Indigenization Committee. 

    The full open letter follows:

    Open Letter on residential schools,

    Brock University’s Department of Child and Youth Studies shares in the grief and anger that has

    arisen in response to the mass graves that have been uncovered and newly acknowledged,

    including those at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc, and at Cowessess First Nation. We urge the Canadian government to address the Calls to Action 71-76 of the 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which include locating and documenting the children who died in residential schools.

    Addressing the Calls to Action supports Indigenous children and their families for whom the consequences of the grim legacy of residential school systems — as well as discrimination and colonial violence driving these systems — are ongoing. The tragic events at the Kamloops Indian Residential School, Cowessess First Nation and other locations represent only a small, heartbreaking fraction of the significant, widespread, systematic crimes and injustices connected to the residential school system in Canada, including forced separation of Indigenous children from their families, sexual abuse, experimentation on Indigenous children, loss of Indigenous language and culture, and ongoing intergenerational trauma.

    The ways in which we collectively think through the unyielding impacts of colonial violence and confront injustice deeply matter. As a department dedicated to research and teaching in child and youth studies, we recognize the urgent importance of sober reflection and reparative reimagining of research and teaching, including how we think with our students about the discrimination and injustice that make up the past and present realities of Indigenous children and their families. All children deserve respect and unconditional care, yet historically and currently, Indigenous children and their families have not received enough of either.

    Department of Child and Youth Studies, Brock University

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases