Generally speaking where is your public health region and is it a large metropolitan area? Curious
It's in N.ON., mainly rural with one major city. It's a huge physical area divided into three sections. It's our section of which I speak.
A large percentage of our population are First Nations. They completely supported the vaccine rollout, managed their vaccination programs through their own local health teams, and had both vaccines done before the Feds went to a "single dose for everyone" plan. By the time we had vaccinated the elderly, we had 50% of our local population done, so we had a considerable head start.
Locally, the vaccination program is being lead by the Family Health Teams, who have more local knowledge about who needs a phone call, who needs a ride, who might not be able to make an appointment on their own, where there are places that the mobile unit needs to make a house call, who needs their hand held, etc.
People here aren't left to their own devices to try to book an appointment with the District Public Health Unit. Those who didn't booked online, got a personal call when their age group came up. They are not likely to hassle their doctor about whether or not they intend to get a vaccination, so compliance is high. When one person in the family was eligible, the team vaccinated the whole family rather than have to reorganize the details for each family member.
I am very fortunate, and only wish that this personal manner of rolling out the vaccination program could happen across the nation. It's a very time consuming task and requires detailed knowledge, but if our local Family Health Team can do it, then so can others, even in large centres.
Even so, there are people who are not connected to a Family Health Team, Public Health Unit, or anybody that cares for their health needs. It takes an active community to make sure no one is missed.