Bailão pledges seniors' public health plan as official start of mayoral race nears
CBC
A Toronto mayoral candidate is promising to harness a program that helped the city address the COVID-19 pandemic and use it as a tool to help improve seniors' health.
Ana Bailão said if she's elected in this spring's mayoral byelection, she will pivot hundreds of community ambassadors who were used to boost vaccine rates in many Toronto neighbhourhoods. Those 600 workers were deployed by more than 30 community organizations to help Toronto Public Health bridge divides that kept people from getting a vaccine.
The $6-million program has been lauded by public health officials and consultants who reviewed its results last year. They found the workers helped break down language barriers and address misinformation that lead to some opting not to get the shot.
The former city councillor said now that the pandemic is entering a different phase, these workers could be a valuable resource to help support Toronto's seniors. She'd like to expand their work and estimates it would cost $13.5 million, a cost that would be shared between the city and province.
"We want to take advantage of 600 ambassadors that speak over 50 languages to create the neighbourhood program for healthy seniors," she said. "This is about better services, bringing health care to the seniors where they live."
The community ambassadors were part of the city's vaccine engagement teams, which are currently being wound down. The city says the funding for that program ends this Friday.
Bailão said that's one reason why she's featuring it as one of the first planks of her election platform. The city has nearly 500 "naturally occurring" seniors communities which were not purpose-built as a retirement or long-term care home, she said. Those communities are home to an estimated 70,000 seniors who need access to health care services.
The program could still help seniors access COVID-19 boosters close to home, but would pivot to dental and pre-diabetes screenings and other preventative medicine. The workers have cultivated valuable relationships within their communities and the city should ensure those are not left by the wayside, she said.
"This is a program that has shown success," she said. "So, let's continue to deliver good services for the residents of Toronto, in this case for the seniors of Toronto."
Toronto Public Health said Tuesday that it continues to learn from the community partners that helped it provide the pandemic service. The agency could not immediately say what will happen to the vaccine engagement teams in the months ahead.
"The next phase – and its funding source – have yet to be determined," Toronto Public Health said in a statement.
Board of health chair Chris Moise, who has endorsed Bailão, said her policy would ensure lessons learned during the pandemic continue to be put into practice. Racialized people face barriers to accessing health care and don't always trust the system, but community ambassadors helped address those concerns, he said.
"You want to continue to build on that relationship and that trust that we've invested so much into time-wise and quite frankly, money," he said. "It'd be a waste of resources to just have that just disappear overnight."
Former Toronto board of health chair Joe Mihevc said while he has not backed any candidate in the mayoral race, he praised Bailão's idea. He saw the work the community ambassadors did firsthand and said the city should find ways to continue that partnership.