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Manitoba

All Manitoba care home residents to be offered COVID-19 vaccines over next month

All people living inManitoba's personal care homes will have a chance to get their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine over the next month as part of a campaign that startsMonday, the province says.

All residents will get both doses by mid-March, says Premier Brian Pallister

A public health nurse prepares dilutant for the COVID-19 vaccine at a COVID-19 vaccination clinic at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre in December. The province said Wednesday that roughly 1,157 people will be vaccinated at seven care homes across Manitoba next week. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

People living inManitoba's personal care homes will have a chance to get their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine over the next month as part of a campaign that startsMonday, the province said Wednesday.

"We want to make sure that [people living in care homes]are looked after because they're vulnerable," Premier Brian Pallister said at a news conference.

"As we know, significant fatalities have occurred in personal care homes right across the world, and our folks that live in them deserve our protection and our love."

As of Wednesday, just under half of Manitoba's 705 COVID-19 deaths were linked to personal care homes, according to provincial data.

WATCH | All Manitoba care home residents to be offered COVID-19 vaccines:

All Manitoba care home residents to be offered COVID-19 vaccines

4 years ago
Duration 4:16
People living in Manitoba's personal care homes will have a chance to get their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine over the next month as part of a campaign that starts Monday, the province said Wednesday.

Until now, immunizations in the province have been reserved for health-care workers who meetspecific criteria, which havebeen expanding since the first doses were administered in mid-December. That list includespeople working in critical care units, long-term care facilities and at COVID-19 vaccinationclinics or test sites.

Roughly 1,157 people will be vaccinatedat seven care homesacross the province's fivehealth regions next week, a news release said.

Those sites are the Charleswood Care Centre, Tuxedo Villa and Oakview Place in Winnipeg;Boyne Lodge in Carman; Hillcrest Place in Brandon; St. Paul's Residence in The Pas; and Tudor House in Selkirk.

Those facilities are the first of Manitoba's total135 care homes that will see residents immunizedwith either the Moderna orPfizer-BioNTech vaccines over 28 days, the release said.

The province says it will release a timeline next week for residents in other care homes to get vaccinated. Over time, it will ramp up weekly immunizations.

Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister toured Winnipeg's new COVID-19 vaccination centre at the RBC Convention Centre on Friday. As of Wednesday morning, 5,165 people in the province had been immunized using the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

Every care home resident who wants the vaccine will be immunized, regardless of whether their site has had a COVID-19 outbreak or whether they have previously had COVID-19 as long as no other medical conditions preclude them from getting the vaccine, the release said.

Anyone who has COVID-19 symptoms when the vaccines arrive will also be excluded from that round of vaccinations. They can still be immunized at a later point, such as when the team returns to administer second doses, a member of the province's COVID-19 vaccine implementation task force said at a news conference later Wednesday.

Dr. Joss Reimer said it's normal to not vaccinate peoplewhen they have symptoms of any illness, not just COVID-19.

"When it comes to any immunization campaign, certain symptoms always exclude people from immunization and that's just a safety mechanism," she said.

"We do the same thing when we [do] our influenza campaigns. We ensure that people don't have specific symptoms that would make us concerned about their potential reaction to the vaccine."

All Manitoba care home residents an estimated 9,834 people will get both doses by mid-March, Pallister said on Wednesday.

Care home challenges

The plan to bring vaccines to care homes comes with its own set of challenges, Reimer said.

For example, the vaccination teams will need to learn how each care home is organized, how staff run things and where residents are at every site, she said.

WATCH | Dr. Joss Reimer on challenges of care home immunizations:

Dr. Joss Reimer on challenges of bringing COVID-19 vaccines to care homes

4 years ago
Duration 1:19
How a facility is set up, whether its dealing with a COVID-19 outbreak and whether any residents being vaccinated have cognitive or behavioural issues that need extra care are some of the things immunization teams will need to consider when bringing vaccines to Manitobas care homes starting next week, says Dr. Joss Reimer, a member of the provinces vaccine implementation task force.

Teams will also need to work with care home staff to make sure they know how to approach residents who have cognitive or behavioural issues and may not react well to an unfamiliar person giving them a vaccine, Reimer said.

Sites that have active COVID-19 outbreaks will require extra steps to avoid spreading the illness, she said.

The province'splan is contingent on the federal government delivering the vaccine to Manitoba as expected, the release said.

Immunization teams in each health region will prioritize facilitiesby measuring the vulnerability of each site, basing thaton the number of residents and percentage of shared rooms, the province said.

Meanwhile, the government is looking to hire a COVID-19 provincial immunization director.

The new position, announced three weeks after Manitoba started vaccinations against the illness, will let the province start thinking about long-term plans in an immunization campaign that will go on for months, Reimer said.

"We have an amazing team. But it's folks who have been pulled from other parts of government, from other parts of health," she said.

"We would like to expand our team and be thinking about how we can continue to do this in the best way possible while still freeing up some of our workers to go back to some of the services that they were providing."

Manitoba's Opposition leader said the fact that job is only being postednow is another example of the province failing to prepare for the second wave of COVID-19.

"Why wouldn't you hire this person last summer, last fall to oversee the vaccine rollout?You're tryingto save three months' salary. And now it's costing us valuable time in terms of the vaccination program," NDP Leader Wab Kinew said later Wednesday.

Manitoba NDP Opposition Leader Wab Kinew said the province should have hired a COVID-19 immunization director sooner. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

Manitoba Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont also accusedPallisterofnot preparing for Manitoba's vaccine rollout early enough.

"He's a premier with absolutely no foresight," Lamont said."I don't know what this government thinks they're doing, because they're still scrambling and they're not organized. There's no excuse for this."

More vaccinesupersites coming

Two new vaccine supersites open in Manitoba over the coming weeks, after the province's first site opened in Winnipeg on Monday.

The next site will open at Brandon's Keystone Centre on Jan. 18. Athird immunization site will open on Feb. 1at the Thompson Airport, which will serve people in the northern city and surrounding communities by air and ground.

To date, four people have experienced adverse events after getting a COVID-19 vaccine in Manitoba. Reimer described those types of events as vaccine reactions that are either unexpected or more serious than what is typically seen. They'rerare,she said, but still expected in anyimmunization campaign.

Two of the people who had such reactions didn't need any further medical care, while theother two had to go to an emergency room for care. One of those peoplelater recovered, and officials are still waiting for more information about the fourth person, Reimer said.

Adverse vaccine reactions, which the province will report to the public weekly, happen sometime after a person is immunized but they aren't necessarily even related to the vaccine, she said.

Reimersaid there are possible allergic reactions people can have to the vaccine, and there areother reasons why some people shouldn't be immunized, like certain health conditions. People with questions about whether they should get the COVID-19 vaccine should talk to their health-care provider to be assessed individually, Reimer said.

"We want to be completely transparent with Manitobans, but at the same time we don't want to create any unnecessary fear."

A health worker prepares a dose of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at a hospital in Hungary. As of Wednesday, four people in Manitoba had adverse reactions after getting vaccinated against COVID-19. (Szilard Koszticsak/The Associated Press)

Of the 7,300 doses of the Moderna vaccine that have arrived in Manitoba, 5,300 are going to First Nations communities. Plans for getting those doses there is being finalized now, Pallistersaid.

"These processes take a little longer at the start, but they'll serve us well as we move through this," he said.

In a joint statement with the province and other First Nations leaders, the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs late Wednesday night said an additional 5,300 doses of the Modernavaccine has been allocated for rollout the week Feb. 23.

As of Wednesday morning, 5,165 people in Manitoba had been vaccinated against COVID-19, the province said.

WATCH | Premier Brian Pallister on Manitoba's COVID-19 vaccine rollout:

Manitoba's premier on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout

4 years ago
Duration 46:01
Premier Brian Pallister discusses the COVID-19 vaccine rollout for Manitoba: Jan. 6, 2021