Sudbury parents welcome children's COVID-19 vaccine - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury parents welcome children's COVID-19 vaccine

Sudburys Ashley Gibson Taylor says she was absolutely thrilled when she heard Pfizer-BioNTech's vaccine for children aged five to 11 will start to arrive in Canada on Sunday.

Pfizer hasagreed to deliver more than 2.9 million doses of the childrens vaccine to Canada

Ashley Gibson-Taylor says she is excited the COVID-19 vaccine will soon be available to her children. (Submitted by Ashley Gibson-Taylor)

Sudbury's Ashley Gibson-Taylor says she was "absolutely thrilled" when she heard Pfizer-BioNTech's vaccine for children aged five to 11 will start to arrive in Canada on Sunday.

Gibson-Taylor has two children who will soon be able to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Her oldest is nine and her youngest is seven years old.

She said her youngest child, who is neurodivergent and in a special-needs class, struggled with online learning.

"For us, it hopefully means that the kids will be able to stay in school," Gibson-Taylor said.

"I mean, cases have been rising in Ontario again, especially in the Sudbury area, and we're fearing constantly that the kids are going to be sent home again. Our oldest was actually home last week for a full week due to a close contact in the class."

Online learning a challenge

She said online learning is hard enough for an adult, and even more challenging for childrenon the best of days.

"If I have to do an online course for work, I'm sitting at a computer for eight hours," Gibson-Taylor said.

"It's absolutely terrible. So trying to force the kids to do that, in my opinion, is the hardest thing that a parent will have to do, is try and force the kids to do something that they wouldn't want to do themselves."

She said almost all of the parents she knows are excited about the vaccine and are readyto get their children vaccinated as soon as possible.

Pfizer-BioNTech hasagreed to deliver more than 2.9 million doses of the children's vaccine to Canada by the end of next week. That is enough to provide a first dose to every eligible child.

Sean Staddon says his six-year-old daughter June will get the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as it is available. (Submitted by Sean Staddon)

Sean Staddon, also a parent based in Sudbury, saidhe is equally excited about the vaccine.

Staddon has two children on the autism spectrum. His daughter June is six years oldand will be eligible for the vaccine as soon as it is available.

"She is on the autism spectrum and going to school in person is super important to us," Staddon said. "It's going to help us make sure her little brother has minimum exposure, who's also in school, but he's only four."

Staddon said online schooling was a challenge for his family. In addition to the challenges his children faced learning online, he and his wife work in essential fields she is in health care and he is in mining so it was difficult to take time off work to support theirchildren as they learned online.

Staddon said he trusts the science behind the vaccines.

"RNA vaccines have been in research for many years, and it's a huge advancement in our society," he said. "And I trust that kind of science."

With files from Sam Juric