Retired nurse pushing for new RSV vaccine to be free for all seniors in Canada - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:28 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Retired nurse pushing for new RSV vaccine to be free for all seniors in Canada

A retired Windsor nurse is pushing the Ontario government to make the new respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine free for all seniors. Currently, the province covers the shot for people 60 and up who live in long-term care and some retirement homes.

Shot against respiratory syncytial virus can cost up to $300 in some provinces

Stephanie Champ has started an online petition urging governments to make RSV vaccines either free or more affordable.
Stephanie Champ, a retired Windsor, Ont., nurse, has started an online petition urging governments to make RSV vaccines either free or more affordable. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

A retired Windsor, Ont., nurse is pushing to have the new respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine be made available at no cost for seniors.

Currently, Ontario coversthe shot for people 60 and up who live in long-term care, elder-care lodges and some retirement homes.

Stephanie Champ, 65, saidfor many seniors like herself who areon fixed incomes, up to $300 per dose is unaffordable.

She saidshe started an online petition after hearing from a childhood friend.

"The reason I started this is [because] my friend has a respiratory illness," said Champ.

"She has asthma. It's very serious. She went to get that shot and they said that would be $300. I'm just appalled because I think we haven't learned anything from the COVID virus."

Two bottles against a white backdrop.
Arexvy is the RSV vaccine approved by Health Canada. (Submitted by GSK)

Champ saidif seniors get ill with RSV,it would overwhelm the hospital systemonce again as it did during the pandemic,and the idea to keep them safe and healthy should be top of mind for every government decision.

"They're offering it for people in long-term care homes, but the independent seniors have to pay through the nose. With this economy, it's very hard for a lot of people to make ends meet.

If not free for all seniors, the shots should beheavily subsidized, according to Champ, and include all ages.

"I don't want to get it. Like, when you have an autoimmune problem, it makes you particularly vulnerable. It kind of scares me going into the fall. I want to mask up because I'm scared, like going into group settings."

A picture of the respiratory syncytial virus taken via electron micrograph.
File photo provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows an electron micrograph of RSV. (CDC/The Associated Press)

There's concern by some that the cost could end up being too expensive for thosewho need it most.

Arexvy is the first vaccine approved by Health Canada to fight RSV. The virus normally causes mild illness but can make older adults and young childrenquite sick.

In some provinces, like Alberta and New Brunswick,shots for seniors aren'tcovered at all.

Anne Summach, a nurse practitioner in Alberta, saidolder adults with pre-existing health conditions are most at risk especially people who havehad heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

"Certainly important a valuable tool in the toolbox," Summachrecently told CBC Radio's The Dose, referring to the need for getting the RSV vaccination.

Summach saidit's shown to be82 per cent effectivefor older adults, and can impact their resilience and reduce hospitalizations and deaths.

The co-chair of the Windsor-Essex Health Coalition saidopening up the vaccine to all seniors in the province is a "no-brainer."

Patrick Hannon saidthe Ontario government should definitely fund it.

"It's unfortunate when a vaccine is $280 compared to the price of going into the ER in respiratory distress," he said. "You have various tests and such there. Why wouldn't the province allow people to receive this vaccine?"

Patrick Hannon with the Windsor-Essex Health Coalition says the province covering the cost of the RSV vaccines is a 'no-brainer.'
Patrick Hannon of the Windsor-Essex Health Coalition says the province covering the cost of the RSV vaccines is a 'no-brainer.' (Dale Molnar/CBC)

Ontario's Ministry of Health saidits approach to RSV for this season is targeting the "most vulnerable" populations in its vaccination rollout programs.

"Our government is ensuring Ontarians, especially those at the highest risk of transmission and severe outcomes, have access to the tools they need to keep themselves safe and healthy this fall respiratory season," the office of Health Minister Sylvia Jonessaid in an emailed statement.

"Ontario is one of the only provinces to roll out a publicly funded vaccination program of the first Health Canada approved RSV vaccine," it stated, in reference to Ontarians 60 and older living in long-term care homes and some retirement residences.

With files from Dale Molnar