Windsor Star

Vaccinatio­ns coming Monday

Local health unit to administer shots at WFCU Centre, rec centre in Leamington

- TAYLOR CAMPBELL

The wait is over.

Seniors age 80 and older in Windsor-essex who live outside long-term care and retirement homes will start to receive the COVID -19 vaccine this Monday.

The local health unit announced on Thursday it would begin to use the WFCU Centre in Windsor as a vaccinatio­n site for the elderly next week. On March 8, Nature Fresh Farms Recreation Centre in Leamington will open as a second vaccinatio­n site for seniors.

“We are excited to roll out what we have and give it to the most vulnerable,” said health unit CEO Theresa Marentette, who acknowledg­ed the supply of vaccines in Windsor-essex remains limited.

The pre-registrati­on form is available online and can be accessed through the Windsor-essex County Health Unit website, wechu.org, by selecting “Go to Pre-registrati­on” on the home page. Family and friends of adults 80 years of age and older are encouraged to support their loved ones in completing the online form.

Those unable to access the website can contact the health unit's vaccine registrati­on hotline at 519251-4072. Due to anticipate­d high call volumes, it may take multiple attempts to speak with a health unit representa­tive.

To pre-register for the vaccine, residents must provide their first and last name, date of birth, address, health card number and phone number. Only people living in Windsor and Essex County will be eligible for inoculatio­n.

The health unit is cautioning residents that this is not a firstcome, first-served system. People who have pre-registered for immunizati­on will be randomly selected and contacted to book their appointmen­ts to ensure “fair and equitable access to appointmen­t times,” the health unit said. Any seniors unable to travel to either vaccinatio­n site will have future opportunit­ies to sign up for immunizati­on once more accessible options become available.

To start, public health unit nurses will administer the Pfizer Biontech COVID-19 vaccine to between 150 and 200 seniors with appointmen­ts between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. five days a week. That number will grow once the Leamington vaccine site opens, though the region does not have enough doses on hand to vaccinate all of the roughly 20,000 residents age 80 and over who have not yet received the jab.

The region's medical officer of health on Thursday said the health unit is starting with a smaller number of vaccines per day to make the experience a “very good” one for seniors, “rather than rushing them” through the pre-vaccine assessment and any questions they may have.

“As the process improves and we feel maybe we can do more, and if we get the indication that we have more vaccines than what we need, that can ramp up to as much as possible,” said Dr. Wajid Ahmed. “Having two sites, one in

the county and one in the city, will allow us to distribute a significan­t number of vaccines per day if we need to ramp up.”

The only limiting factor is the supply of the vaccine, he said.

“If the province wants to give us more vaccine tomorrow, our system is ready to handle that.”

Almost two-thirds of the 378 local COVID -19 deaths were people age 80 and older, he said, including a woman in her 80s who lived in the general community and whose death was reported on Thursday.

Phase 1 of Ontario's inoculatio­n plan initially included seniors in long-term care homes, but not those living in the general community. Those seniors were told they'd have to wait until essential workers were vaccinated to roll up their sleeves in Phase 2 a few months from now.

The province changed course last week and added those aged 80 and above to Phase 1, along with health-care workers identified as “very high” priority, like dentists, midwives, respirator­y therapists, and dozens of other profession­als.

If the province wants to give us more vaccine tomorrow, our system is ready to handle that.

The local health unit is one of the first in the province to create its own COVID-19 vaccine booking system. Wellington-dufferinGu­elph Public Health launched its online pre-registrati­on form on Tuesday, as did Six Nations of the Grand River. Waterloo Region launched its own vaccine portal on Wednesday.

Retired general Rick Hillier, chair of Ontario's COVID-19 Vaccine Distributi­on Task Force, said on Wednesday that the province's booking system wouldn't be live until March 15, and those age 80 and older would start to receive the jab in most of the province starting the third week of March.

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