Young children in the Outaouais get their 1st COVID-19 vaccines - Action News
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Young children in the Outaouais get their 1st COVID-19 vaccines

Registration opened online through the Clic-Sant websiteTuesday, and by Wednesday, around 7,000 of 22,000 available time slots in the Outaouais had already been snapped up.

Dedicated clinics, support dogs on hand to help five-to-11-year-olds

Health officials in western Quebec held a vaccination clinic for children age five to 11 at the Palais des Congrs de Gatineau Nov. 24, 2021. (Radio-Canada)

Some of western Quebec's youngest residents have rolled up their sleeves to get their first COVID-19 vaccine.

Children between the ages of five and 11 across the country are now eligible to receive shotsof thePfizer-BioNTechvaccine after Health Canada granted approval late last week.

On Wednesday, the first children in the Outaouaisdid just that.

"It is truly a new era of immunization ...We have every reason to believe that things will go well,"Nency Hroux, director of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign for the Outaouais, told Radio-Canada in French.

Registration opened online through the Clic-Sant websiteTuesday. ByWednesday, Hroux said around 7,000 of the 22,000time slots in the Outaouais had already been filled, with new ones added as needed.

Parents are urged to make an appointment through the online system, but walk-in appointments will beavailable Saturdays at the Palais des Congrsbetween 9:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.

In Ottawa, first doses are expected to be available by Friday.

Some hesitation

Western Quebec health officials have acknowledged someparents may be hesitant, however, for their children to receive the vaccine.

Dr. Carol McConnery, a medical consultant in infectious diseases with theCentre intgr de sant et de services sociaux de l'Outaouais (CISSSO),invited parents to learn more about the vaccine through reliable websites or people they trust like their doctor or pharmacist.

"There are already three million doses that have been administered in the United States to five-to-11-year-olds in the last two weeks and they have seen very few side effects and no serious side effects," she said in a French-language interview.

The appointments offered to younger children in theOutaouais will be dedicated entirely to them, the health unit said.

Other measuresinclude broadcasting children's television programs in waiting areas, Hroux said, and offeringsurprises after they receive their first dose. Support dogs will also be on-hand during certain time slots.

Balloons from Disney's Frozen movies were some of the decorations at Wednesday's clinic. (Radio-Canada)

Both Elisabeth Mertens' children eight-year-old Antoine and10-year-old Jade received their vaccines Wednesday afternoon.

"It's important to us ... it is a social responsibility," said Mertens."We cannot wait to get back to normal."

Jade acknowledged she was "a little" scared, but "it wasn't bad" afterwards. She said she's looking forward to more normal family reunions around the holiday season.

"We're going to be able to have fun with our grandparents, our friends," she said.

School vaccinations

On Monday, CISSSOwill begin vaccinating children in schools, visiting 54 locations where students with a parental consent form will be eligible for their first dose.

Hroux said students at other schools in the region can be transported to one of those sites for their shot, as well as one of the six vaccination centres.

Quebec Premier Franois Legaulthas said the aim is to offer a first dose to all families who wish to have their young children vaccinated by Christmas. The second dose would then be offered eight weeks later, from mid-January onwards.

With files from Radio-Canada's Laurie Trudel and milie Bergeron