Health law, policy experts criticize Alberta’s lack of Phase 2 COVID-19 vaccine plan

Health law and health policy experts say there is a lack of transparency about Phase 2 of Alberta’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan.

On Thursday, Premier Jason Kenney was asked when Albertans can expect details of Phase 2, which would offer the vaccine to at-risk populations.

READ MORE: Alberta health minister blames feds for scarce details on Phase 2 COVID-19 vaccine plan

“The cabinet committee on COVID just considered last week a proposal from the department of Health for the priority groups as we roll out the COVID-19 vaccines to the general population,” he said.

“We will be releasing that in due course. We want to make sure we get it right.”

Kenney did not offer a specific timeline.

He said officials will be consulting with other provinces on how they plan to roll out vaccines.




Click to play video: No details yet on Phase 2 of Alberta’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout

“The key thing is we just need more supply right now,” Kenney said. “We’re ready to pull the trigger to start the vaccination of everyone in Alberta over the age of 75 and everyone in the Indigenous population over the age of 65.

“That is our key next group.”

READ MORE: The ethics of vaccine rollout: Who should be in Alberta’s Phase 2?

Kenney said the province would then move down by age cohort, with an aim to vaccinate everyone over the age of 65 and people with chronic conditions.

Blake Murdoch, with the Health Law Institute at the University of Alberta, said the public deserves to know what the details of Phase 2 are.

“I think we can legitimately say the Alberta government is behind on this,” he said.

“I think the public has a right to have some idea of how things are going to roll out.”

Murdoch said Canadians are aware of issues with vaccine procurement but points to how other provinces, such as Saskatchewan and B.C., have released Phase 2 plans.




Click to play video: B.C. government unveils age-based COVID-19 vaccination timeline

“People want to have some idea. They need to have some sense of when, in a systematic way, they are going to be able to get vaccinated and then continue on a bit with life,” Murdoch said.

Read more:
Alberta slams federal rollout of COVID-19 vaccine as positivity rate sits at 3.9%

John Church, a health policy expert at the University of Alberta, argues that the province has run into a public relations problem with the management of COVID-19, as well as other policy issues.

And he said that is driving the speed of which details are being released.

“The government is being very cautious about how they provide information and what information they are providing because they don’t want to, for example, over-promise on what they’re going to do with the rollout of the COVID vaccine and then have that fall apart for a variety of possible reasons,” Church said.

READ MORE: Prairie premiers score low approval rating over handling of coronavirus: poll

In November, a poll showed 59 per cent of Albertans were dissatisfied with the province’s COVID-19 response. Another poll in December show that 30 per cent of Alberta respondents were satisfied with the job Premier Jason Kenney was doing when it came to COVID-19 – the lowest level of satisfaction for Canada’s 10 provincial leaders.

“I think that because they’ve had so much go wrong for them politically in the last several months, they are going to be pretty gun shy about doing anything prematurely that might add fuel to the fire around that,” Church said.

Church explains that the government is trying to achieve a “very delicate kind of balance.”

“It is a problem when you don’t have information out there. It does create a vacuum but then again, when I go back to the political issues they’re dealing with, I think there’s a balance they’re trying to achieve at this point,” he said.


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