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They're unwilling to get vaccinated. Will a 'tough' talk with their family doctor help?

Dr. Mario Elia, a family physician in London, Ont., says he's prepared to have some 'tough' conversations about vaccine hesitancy with his younger patients who don't have their first dose.

Only 57 per cent of people under 25 have faith in COVID-19 vaccines, says recent poll

Barbara Violo, pharmacist and owner of The Junction Chemist Pharmacy, draws up a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, in Toronto, Friday, June 18, 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

A London, Ont., family doctor is hoping to overcome vaccine scepticism among his patients by having one-on-one conversations with those who have yet to receive their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine to overcome their reluctance andquell their anxieties.

Dr. Mario Elia is a family physician with the London Lambeth Family Health Organization. He said about one in four of his patients haven't received their first dose and 85 per cent of them are aged 18 to 35.

"This is a tougher to reach group for most health issues," he said. "They think they're not necessarily at risk."

His patients are on par with the national average, according to Health Canada. As of Thursday, about one in four Canadians aged 12 and over have yet toreceiveat least one dose.

Low-income, younger Canadians least likely to trustvaccine

As far as vaccine hesitancy goes, those most least likely to trust the shot are younger and low-income Canadians, according to a recent poll by The Proof Strategies 2021 CanTrust Index.

A close-up of a pharmacist's hands injecting a vaccine into a person's arm.
A pharmacist administers the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to man in London, Ont. Anyone 40 and over is eligible for a shot at participating pharmacy locations. (Colin Butler/CBC)

Its online survey of 1,517 Canadians conducted between May 1-3 suggests the two groups least likely to have faithin vaccines arepeople under 25, at57 per cent, and households with incomes of $35,000 or less,at 58 per cent, compared to 74 per cent among Canadians overall.

The margin of error in the poll was+/-2.5per cent,19 times out of 20.

Elia said much of the vaccine hesitancyamong his young patients stems from being poorly informed about the science behind the shots available and his patients' own sense of invincibility.

Misinformation, sense of invincibility biggest barriers

"Not surprisingly, some of the concerns they have are related to some kind of misinformation that they've seen. Some of their concerns are also related to their own perceived lack of risk."

He said that perceived lack of risk, coupled with the fact that many of them are worried about the potential long-term side effects of the vaccine, keep a lot of his young patients from rolling up their sleeves.

"There's not really any plausibility that there would be any long-term side effects."

Rather than worry about the potential long-term effects of the vaccine, Elia said his patients should be worried about the long-term side effects of getting the virus itself, whichcan include debilitating chronic fatigue for months after they got sick and other symptoms that are difficult to shake, let alone get treated.

"To worry about long term side effects from that small a dose that we have a fairly good understanding of is really nothing they should be concerned about."

"We don't really know the long-term effects of getting COVID."

Elia said he's under no illusion that it's going to take some convincing to get those who are vaccine hesitant to roll up their sleeves.

"It's going to be some tough slogging. I don't think it's going to be as easy as let's do a few public service announcements, it's going to be those one-on-one conversations and it's going to take a lot of work."

We all live in a confusing time, where a widening availability of vaccines is colliding with pockets of vaccine hesitancy, new variants of the virus and the fact that millions of children under 12 remain vulnerable because they can't get the shot at all. Many analysts have said these factors meanit won't be easy to get to herd immunity, where the nation can finally return to normal.

Grandparents often most effective at changing minds

In fact, the argument aboutvaccines is likely going on across dinner tables in some Canadian households. Many families might be dealing with one or two memberswho refuseto get the shot, potentially leaving themselves and young children and seniors vulnerable.

Dr. Elia said it's best to have the conversation early and try not to alienate the reluctant person.

Also, he said it might be best forvulnerable family members themselves, particularly seniors, to confront the person in their family who refuses to get vaccinated.

"It's one thing for their doctor to tell them to get vaccinated. It's another thing entirely for grandma and grandpa to tell 25-year-old Johnny,'please get vaccinated.'"

"I've found that particularly effective and I find that young people do heed that message when it comes from somebody they love."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this article stated, 'as of Thursday, about one in four Canadians aged 12 and over have received at least one dose,' when in fact one in four Canadians aged 12 and over have yet to receive one dose.
    Jun 25, 2021 12:38 PM ET