I can answer that wearing several different hats, my provincial hat, my Public Health Agency of Canada consultant hat, and also my WHO consultant hat.
Relatively speaking, Canada, depending on which province you were in, did brilliantly well or did not. We had quite a range across our country. Again, I think a big chunk of this was due to misinformation and disinformation. As well, we learned that what politicians say makes a huge difference. We had not appreciated before the COVID pandemic how much political impact there is on what people decide to do.
I helped draft the 2014 WHO report on vaccine hesitancy, and we didn't even talk about politics and the impact of that, nor did we talk about misinformation and disinformation, because it wasn't a big factor.
So, yes, there are big differences across the country, and there are, therefore, differences in vaccine acceptance, which led to differences in mortality rate per hundred thousand. It mattered where you lived.