This is a rather delicate issue, obviously, because there are public health issues at stake. Since it is an infectious disease, the personal choice of whether or not to be vaccinated, in these circumstances, has a significant effect on those around you and on society as a whole.
Indeed, in some of the debates, there was a sense that those who refused to be vaccinated, especially initially, were demonized and ridiculed. This contributed to radicalization in some cases. Since then, the public discourse has been adapted somewhat by talking about vaccine hesitancy and by trying to convince people to get vaccinated rather than repressing them.
Generally speaking, here in Canada, as elsewhere, this has been done pretty much everywhere. There have been times when the polarization has been a bit too much, it has contributed to radicalization in some cases.