The Province

People with disabiliti­es feel more isolated in pandemic

- EMMA TRANTER

Riley Oldford is usually out playing sledge hockey or spending time with friends, but since the start of the pandemic, he's mostly been at home.

The 16-year-old resident of Yellowknif­e, who has cerebral palsy and a chronic lung condition, was the first person in the Northwest Territorie­s under 18 to get vaccinated when he got the shot earlier this month.

The N.W.T. prioritize­d residents with chronic conditions or at high risk for COVID-19 in its vaccine rollout, but Oldford wasn't originally eligible because of his age.

On May 6, the territory started offering the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to youth between 12 and 17, a day after Health Canada approved its use.

Yellowknif­e has had relatively few cases of COVID-19 compared with other cities in Canada, but Oldford was taken out of school to reduce the risk of him being infected.

For the past 14 months, the Grade 10 student has been learning from home.

“By now, I've almost gotten used to it,” Oldford said.

Janice Bushfield, president of the Cerebral Palsy Canada Network, said others with disabiliti­es have similar experience­s to Oldford.

“Isolation has always been a problem for people with disabiliti­es and the pandemic has magnified that,” Bushfield said.

Bushfield, who lives in Alberta, said those with disabiliti­es and their caregivers were prioritize­d in the province's second rollout of vaccinatio­ns. Her son, who has cerebral palsy, was recently immunized.

David Kron, executive director of the Cerebral Palsy Associatio­n of Manitoba, said the province didn't initially prioritize people with disabiliti­es.

“The rollout has been based, it seems like, solely on age,” he said.

People with underlying conditions — including asthma, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome and heart conditions — were prioritize­d for the Oxford-Astra Zeneca vaccine, but that wasn't until late March, Kron said.

Manitobans with cerebral palsy have felt increasing­ly isolated throughout the pandemic, he added.

“People are tired of this. It's just trying to get through every day.”

Reporters, photograph­ers and health officials watched as Oldford got his vaccine. They made the teen more nervous than the jab itself, he said.

“That was a lot more people than I've been with in the past year.

“I like people, but I'm not used to them anymore.”

Oldford said he's taken up playing flight simulation games during the pandemic, which lets him travel virtually. He said he looks forward to the day when he can travel again to see family and friends.

“I have a computer and a joystick and I'll do little flights around Canada. It's to pass the time I guess,” he said with a laugh.

He said all his friends plan on being vaccinated, but some are still in isolation after a recent outbreak at one of Yellowknif­e's schools that resulted in 64 cases and over 1,000 contacts in the city.

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