B.C. advocate calls on province to prioritize people with Down syndrome for COVID-19 vaccine - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. advocate calls on province to prioritize people with Down syndrome for COVID-19 vaccine

People with Down syndrome are 10 times more likely to die from the virus, according to the Down Syndrome Resource Foundation, which has written to Dr. Bonnie Henry to ask if the vulnerable population can be moved up the vaccine queue.

People with Down syndrome are 10 times more likely to die from the virus

Andrew Bingham, 27, says while he tries to stay connected with friends using technology, COVID-19 has already cost him a job, sports, and his social life. (Submitted by the Down Syndrome Resource Foundation)

The provincial government has begun vaccinating British Columbia's most vulnerable against COVID-19 and an advocacy group for people with Down syndrome is hoping the group it represents will be added to this priority queue.

Wayne Leslie, CEO of the Burnaby-based Down Syndrome Resource Foundation (DSRF), laid out his reasons why in a letter addressed to Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry earlier this week.

Down syndrome is a genetic condition that can resultin physical, mental, and developmental disabilities and, as a result, people with the condition can have complex health and mental health needs.

In his letter to Henry, Leslie says people over the age of 40 with Down syndrome can develop high-risk medical conditions that are comparable to someone over the age of 70 in the general population.

Leslie's complete letter to the province on behalf of theDSRF can be found here.

According to the foundation, the average life spanof a person with Down syndrome is approximately 60 years. The average life expectancyfor British Columbians, according to 2017 Statistics Canada data, is 84 for women and 79.9 for men.

The province has taken a phased-in approach to its vaccination program, with the first available dosesbeing doled out to front-line health-care workers, and staff and residents in long-term care facilities. After that, the plan is to primarily vaccinate peopleby age, beginning with the most elderly.

The priority vaccine groups can be found here.

Recommendations to province

Leslie's letter makes two recommendationsthat adults with Down syndrome over the age of 40 be considered high priority for vaccination, and thatindividuals with Down syndrome between the ages of 16 and 39 also be given priority consideration.

His letter highlights that adults with Down syndrome are four times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 and 10 times more likely to die from the virus.

Leslie's statistics are based on research published in the Annals of Internal Medicinein October that looked at a cohort of over eightmillion adults, of whichjust over 4,000 had Down syndrome.Twenty-seven of those with Down syndrome died of COVID-19.

"One of the key reasons is that someone in their fortiestypically has the health issues associated with aging of the typical population in its seventies," Leslie toldStephen Quinn, host ofCBC's The Early Edition, on Thursday.

He said people with Down syndrome in the 16 to 39 category shouldbe considered a priority because many individuals in that age group, due to the pandemic, are without critical programs and services such as mental health supports.

Wayne Leslie is CEO of one of the largest Down syndrome services provider in Canada. (Submitted by the Down Syndrome Resource Foundation)

People with developmental disabilities, including Down syndrome, often alsodepend heavily onpredictable routines to successfully navigate daily liferoutines that have been completelyupended by COVID-19.

"It's very hard for me and my friends," said 27-year-oldAndrew Bingham, who has Down syndrome and is an ambassador for the foundation.

Bingham said while he tries to stay connected with friends by text message, COVID-19 has already cost him a job, sports, and his social life.

Provincial responses

Premier John Horgan, addressing reporters on a wide range of issues Thursday, said he has received "piles of mail" from individuals and groups asking to be prioritized for a vaccine.

"We want to start, Ithink the rule of thumb, is the older you are the more at risk you are," said Horgan.

In a Thursday statement to CBC, the Ministry of Health saidvaccines are not available to everyone at once and because of the challenges in storing and shipping the doses, certain groups have been prioritized.

"As Dr. Henry has said, everybody is important in B.C. and everyone who the vaccine is recommended for will have access to it. But we know that some people are at higher risk, and that is why they are getting immunized first," said the statement.

Henryand Health Minister Adrian Dixwill provide an update next week about when the general population in B.C. will be able to receive the vaccine.

Leslie is optimistic the province will respond to his letter and consider his request.

Using general population figures, the foundation estimates the Down syndrome population in B.C. to be somewhere between 3,500 and 4,000 people and about 2,000 of that group to be over age 16.

Tap here to listen to Wayne Leslie and Andrew Bingham interviewed on CBC's The Early Edition.

With files from The Early Edition