Experiences of the Red River Métis with COVID-19 Policy Decisions: A partnership-based, whole-population linked administrative data study

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Nathan Nickel
Olena Kloss
Okechukwu Ekuma
Carole Taylor
Michelle Driedger
Danielle Saj
Garret Munch
Frances Chartrand

Abstract

Objectives
Indigenous peoples, like Red River Métis, were greatly affected by COVID-19. Manitoba’s Indigenous COVID-19 vaccine policy initially focused exclusively on First Nations. Red River Métis, one of Canada’s recognized Indigenous peoples, were not prioritized. We examined the health outcomes of these policy decisions.


Method
This retrospective cohort study leveraged data available in the Manitoba Population Research Data Repository. We linked data from the Métis Population Database to whole-population COVID testing and vaccination data, and administrative data on health service use. Restricted mean survival time models tested whether vaccination uptake differed between Red River Métis and all other Manitobans (AOM), adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics and comorbidities. A Susceptible-Exposed-Infected-Recovered-Vaccinated model simulated how prioritizing Red River Métis for vaccination at the same time as First Nations may have altered the pandemic curve. We used estimates to model associated reductions in health service use for Red River Métis.


Results
Cumulative prevalence of COVID-19 infection rates were similar between Métis and AOM until May 2021 when rates became higher among Métis. Between May and December 2021, rates of first vaccination were lower among Metis than AOM. Métis were more likely than AOM to be hospitalized due to Covid-19 between March and August 2021 and visit physicians for COVID related reasons from October 2020 to Feb 2021 and November 2021 to March 2022. Simulation analyses showed that prioritizing Red River Métis at the same time as First Nations would have reduced the peak infection rate by 54.6% reducing health service use.


Conclusions
Understanding the experiences of Red River Métis relative to AOM is critical to identifying public health strategies which close gaps in vaccine uptake and infections. Including Red River Métis with other Indigenous populations may have reduced adverse outcomes and health service use associated with COVID-19.

Article Details

How to Cite
Nickel, N., Kloss, O., Ekuma, O., Taylor, C., Driedger, M., Saj, D., Munch, G. and Chartrand, F. (2025) “Experiences of the Red River Métis with COVID-19 Policy Decisions: A partnership-based, whole-population linked administrative data study”, International Journal of Population Data Science, 10(4). doi: 10.23889/ijpds.v10i4.3226.

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