From the CBC:
“Family begged to have sister
with Down syndrome vaccinated sooner. Now she's on a ventilator with COVID-19”
(Demetra (Toula) Zouzoulas, 44,
shown on her birthday. Her sister says she asked repeatedly if Toula could be
vaccinated before those with Down syndrome became eligible. She says every
request was denied.)
Toula Zouzoulas, 44, who has Down
syndrome, has spent the last year terrified of catching COVID-19, according to
her sister Olga Zouzoulas. Now, Toula is on a ventilator, fighting for her life
in the ICU of Montfort Hospital in Ottawa after testing positive. Zouzoulas
said she feels all this could have been avoided if her sister had been
vaccinated, arguing that Toula and others with Down syndrome should have
qualified sooner. Under Ontario's vaccine rollout program, those with
intellectual or developmental disabilities are considered high-risk under Phase
2, but didn't become eligible until May 3 — too late for Toula who contracted
COVID-19 a week earlier. "The government didn't see them as the highest
risk and they failed. They failed my sister," said Zouzoulas. "She
deserves to be protected ... and she wasn't." Toula lives in a COVID-19
hotspot in Ottawa with her elderly parents, one of whom is considered high-risk
and requires home care services. The parents qualified for a vaccine in March,
as did Olga, who is her mother's caregiver. But Toula had to wait.
Repeatedly denied Given
these circumstances and the fact that Toula has Down syndrome, Zouzoulas tried
repeatedly to have her vaccinated as early as possible but said every request
was denied by Ottawa Public Health (OPH), who told her Toula didn't yet qualify.
In mid-April, Toula developed a stomach ulcer that required surgery.
Complications after the surgery kept her in hospital longer. Then in
late April, Toula tested positive for COVID-19 while in hospital and is now in
the ICU on a ventilator. "It's horrible. She should not be in this
situation. She needs to be home," Zouzoulas said.
People with Down syndrome have
'increased risk for dying' There have been campaigns across Canada, from
both organizations and families, to get people with Down syndrome vaccinated
sooner. Yona Lunsky, professor at the University of Toronto, who specializes
in developmental disabilities and health care, says it is a good thing that
Ontario named people with Down syndrome and other developmental disabilities as
a priority — even if vaccinations are still too late for some. Not every
province in the country has done so. "I think the challenge with
Phase 2 is that there were so many different groups to be included,"
Lunksy said. "Certainly the research shows that people with Down
syndrome, regardless of where they living, if they get exposed to COVID, then
it's harder for them to fight that infection and others and they're at
increased risk for dying." Lunsky said that alone is "a really
good reason for us to take good preventative action, to support them as best we
can to stop them from getting ill and to treat them as quickly as
possible." The key, according to Lunsky, is not just making people
with developmental disabilities a priority group for vaccination, but
"actually doing everything you can to get the needle into people's
arms."
'They need to be protected' OPH
said it couldn't comment on any particular case, but that it's "obligated
to follow" the order of vaccination priority laid out by the province. In
a statement, it said only "in select, rare situations where the provincial
guidance is not explicit or not yet determined" does the city's taskforce
provide interpretation or recommendations on eligible populations. Ontario's
Ministry of Health has not replied to a request for comment from CBC News. Zouzoulas
is still left wanting answers — and a change if anything like this should ever
happen again in the future. "The Down syndrome population, they
can't be put [in the queue] where they were this time and they need to be
protected.... She may not matter to them, but she matters to us."
^ This is another sad and
avoidable Covid Case. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/down-syndrome-covid-19-vaccine-1.6031801
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