Big uptake for COVID-19 vaccine among Ulukhaktok residents - Action News
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Big uptake for COVID-19 vaccine among Ulukhaktok residents

Ulukhaktok residents have been turning up in high numbers to get vaccinated. They say they're doing it to protect their grandchildren and elders.

Beaufort communities get second round of Moderna shots this week

Ulukhaktok Mayor Joshua Oliktoaksays after some initial reluctance he decided to get the COVID-19 vaccine to protect his grandson and the community's elders. (Mackenzie Scott/CBC)

The second dose of the Moderna vaccine arrived in Ulukhaktok this week and residents are responding with enthusiasm.

Over the last two weeks, the Beaufort Delta communities of Ulukhahktok, Paulatuk, Sachs Harbor and Tsiigehtchic have started receivingthe second dose.

Of around 450 residentsin Ulukhaktok, Mayor Joshua Oliktoaksaid around 250 of them were over 18 and eligible to get vaccinated.

Over 200 second doses were administered, according to public health officials on site, with another 20 or so residents receiving their first dose.

Oliktoaksaid he was tentative at first about the vaccine, but he got the shot to protect his grandson and local elders and he has zero regrets.

"It's been very satisfying to see the amount of the community members to get the vaccination,"Oliktoaksaid. "It puts us at peace in our bodies and in our minds that a lot of our elders are safe now."

Lots of interest

At the clinic Wednesday, community health nurse Stacey Kozak and her team could be seen making calls to residents checking to see if they were coming to get their first or second doses.

"It's been really, really good," she said. "Everyone has been very eager and for the last couple of weeks people have been calling the health centre wanting to know when the COVID vaccine team is coming back, and wanting to make sure they get their name on the list."

Community health nurse Stacey Kozak said her team has been telling Ulukhaktok, N.W.T., residents about the Moderna vaccine's side effects, and that those side effects pale in comparison to the effects of COVID-19. (Mackenzie Scott/CBC)

At the clinic, nurses explain to residents the temporary side effects they may experience the day after getting the shot,including soreness around the injection site and feeling under the weather.

In Ulukhaktok, severalresidents reported feeling unwell the day after the second doseand decided to take the day off of work.

Helen Kalvak Elihakvik School closed on Wednesday after multiple teachers called in sick, but Kozak said that it's nothing people should worry about.

"It's normal. It's to be expected and they should rest if they feel they need to,"Kozaksaid.

COVID-19 'could just wipe us out'

"Whatever side effects they are having [are] better than getting COVID. So even if you feel under the weather, you know you are protected against the potential side effects of getting COVID, which could be very significant."

Elders John and Emma Alikamik were away during the first round of vaccinations, so they were happy to be able to get their first doses this week.

"If one of us gets it in this town it could just wipe us out, so it's important to get it," Emma Alikamik said.

Oliktoak, Ulukhaktok's mayor, has now had both doses. He said he had a sore arm and was tiredWednesday, but felt betterThursday.

Oilktoak said this past Christmas wasthe first time he canremember that there was no gathering during theholidays.He's hopeful that gatherings will be able to take place again soon, once things return to "somewhat normal, whatever that normal will be."

Corrections

  • This story has been updated to remove an unattributed claim that 95 per cent of eligible residents had gotten at least one dose of the vaccine.
    Jun 09, 2021 2:27 PM CT