/

Encouraging vaccinations through equitable strategies

General practitioner vaccinating old patient in private clinic with copy space. Doctor giving injection to woman at hospital. Nurse holding syringe and using cotton before make Covid-19 or coronavirus vaccine.

A range of strategies have been suggested to increase vaccination rates – from free donuts and lotteries to employment requirements and vaccine certificates. Wellesley Institute has conducted a rapid review of effectiveness evidence and an analysis of unintended impacts on equity-seeking groups of eleven strategies to determine which strategies could meaningfully increase vaccination rates and which should be avoided due to potential differential harms they pose to Canadians.

Encouraging vaccinations though equitable strategiesDownload
Jesse Rosenberg

Jesse Rosenberg

Jesse Rosenberg is a legal and policy professional with political and policy experience in the fields of health, labour and justice. Director of Policy at the Wellesley Institute, Jesse previously held leadership roles with the government of Ontario and the Ontario College of Trades. He has extensive experience and expertise in stakeholder relations and legislative and regulatory development and analysis. He holds a Bachelor of Humanities from Carleton University and a Juris Doctor from Osgoode Hall.

Rebecca Cheff

Nahomi Amberber