As first Quebecers get vaccinated against COVID-19, leaders see light at end of long, dark tunnel - Action News
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Montreal

As first Quebecers get vaccinated against COVID-19, leaders see light at end of long, dark tunnel

Gisle Lvesque, an 89-year-old woman who lives at CHSLD Saint-Antoine, is the first person in Canada to be given the new vaccine against the coronavirus, marking a new stage in the fight against the pandemic.

An 89-year-old Quebec City resident boldly takes the first step in historic national vaccination program

First resident receives COVID-19 vaccination at Quebec long-term care home

4 years ago
Duration 0:50
Gisle Lvesque, 89, became the first Canadian to receive a vaccination against COVID-19 at CHSLD Saint-Antoine in Quebec City. (Video provided by Quebec's Health ministry)

It's been 291 days since the first case of a deadly new virus was recorded in Quebec. Since then COVID-19 has killed 7,533 people in the province, left hundreds with long-lasting symptoms and disrupted the lives of everyone else, young and old.

But on Monday, around 11:30 a.m., 89-year-old Gisle Lvesque rolled up her sleeve and became the first Canadian to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, setting inmotion a giantinoculationeffort that promises to end the nightmare.

"I see this as the first step forward into the light,'' federalHealth Minister PattyHajdu said at a news conference in Montreal, not long after vaccines began to be administered in Quebec City, Montreal and Toronto.

It was by the most prosaic of means that the first batches of the vaccine arrived atCHSLD Saint-Antoine in Quebec City, where Lvesque lives, and the Maimonides Geriatric Centre in Cte Saint-Luc: UPS delivery truck.

Inside, staff had been practising how to handle the precious cargo. Thevaccine, manufactured byPfizer and BioNTech, has to be stored between80 C to 60 C, and then thawed for injection.

Quebec willreceive only 4,000 doses this week and selected two centrally located long-term care homes in an effort to vaccinate as many residents and staff as possible.

Gloria Lallouz is greeted by Quebec's health minister after she received a first dose of COVID-19 vaccine on Monday. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

The provincial health minister, Christian Dub, said everything went according to plan on Monday. He expects there will be 21 vaccination sites in the province by next week, and predicted as many as 50,000 Quebecers will be vaccinated by early January.

"Usually, I'm very calm. But, as you can see, I'm quite excited. This is great news for Quebec,"Dubtold reporters Monday, outsideMaimonides.

'It's important to keep living'

The excitement was palpable. After months of tightly structured briefings from health officials and political leaders, all formality dissolved when staffatMaimonidesescorted 78-year-oldGloria Lallouzoutside.

Lallouzwas the first resident to receive the vaccine, and both journalists and politicians alike abandoned the news conference to applaudher, thankher and ask her how she felt.

"Fabulous," she said.Lallouz had been confined to her room for months because of the pandemic, and she said she relished the prospect of regaining some freedom.

"It's important to keep living," she said.

The pandemic has exacted a heavy tollonMaimonides, as it has on dozens of other CHSLDsaround Quebec.Fifteen residents at Maimonides have died of COVID-19 this fall, on top of nearly forty who were killed in the spring.

Nearly all of the 300 residents have signed up to receive the vaccine. "We need to stop the deaths here," said Beverly Spanier, a retired school teacher andMaimonides resident who was also vaccinated on Monday.

"We cannot continue to go on forever in a situation where no one can leave their rooms, where we can't have a life of normalcy," Spanier added.

Doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are delivered to the Maimonides Geriatric Centre on Monday. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

ThePfizer-BioNTechvaccine requires two injections threeweeks apart in order for the immunity to develop.Spaniersaid she has big plans once she gets the second dose, including visiting a dentist as well as a friend in intensive care.

"I will have a big sign on me: 'Vaccinated, let me out,'" she said.

Signs of reluctance among staff

Along with the residents atMaimonidesand theCHSLD Saint-Antoine, staff and other local health-care workers will be among the first Quebecers to receive the vaccine this week.

But whereas the residents have volunteered in large numbers for the shots, there were some signs of reluctance among health-care workers on Monday morning.

A senior Montreal-area health official told Radio-Canada that only between 35 and 40 per cent of the staff atMaimonideshad signed up for the vaccine.

"There is more work to do to increase overall vaccinations," Francine Dupuis, the associate CEO of the health authority that oversees Maimonides, told reporters at the news conference.

She explained that some health-care workers wanted to wait and see if thePfizer-BioNTech vaccine will have anyside-effects.

Only mild side-effectssuch as fever or fatigue, which arecommon with vaccines have been reported so far.Health Canada says it has no safetyconcerns.

"I think the vaccine is something that will take some time to get accustomed to,"Dub said. "We said very clearly over the last few weeks we will not force anybody to be vaccinated. I think that's the best way to go."

More restrictions coming

While the vaccinations on Monday sent ripples of hope throughout the province, the virus continues to wreak havoc across the province.

The number of daily cases continues to climb and hospitals in Quebec City and SaguenayLac-Saint-Jeanare struggling to keep up with the surge of COVID-19 patients.

Premier Franois Legaultis expected to announce additional closures and restrictions on Tuesday, in an attempt to use the holiday period to slow thespread of the disease.

"We're going to have to tighten restrictions in businesses," he said in an interview on Monday. "We will have to close them for a time. There aretoo many contacts, and we have to reduce them."

With files from Jay Turnbull, Valeria Cori-Manocchio, CBC's Daybreak and Radio-Canada

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