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  • Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

    H1N1 vaccinations start Monday in Quebec

    Province confirms 1st death since August

    Last Updated: Wednesday, October 21, 2009 | 8:20 PM ET

    CBC News


    Health Minister Yves Bolduc, left, and Quebec's chief public health officer Dr. Alain Poirier say the vaccination campaign will start Monday. (CBC) <META content="MSHTML 6.00.2900.5848" name=GENERATOR><LINK title=/iw/ewebeditpro20/feature.css disabled href="/iw/ewebeditpro20/feature.css" rel=stylesheet>
    Quebec's vaccination campaign against H1N1 will start Monday, Health Minister Yves Bolduc says.

    The move comes as the federal government officially approved the swine flu vaccine.

    The vaccine is the best way to protect against the flu but remains a personal choice, Bolduc said Wednesday.

    Dr. Alain Poirier, Quebec's chief public health officer, said the second wave of the flu has already begun in the province.

    Officials confirmed the death of an 87-year-old woman from the Chaudi?re-Appalaches region on Tuesday, Poirier said, noting she was the first person since August to die from complications relating to the virus.

    The government has already distributed 400,000 doses of the vaccine to the province's regions.

    The first to be vaccinated will include:
    • Health-care workers.
    • Pregnant women.
    • Children between six months and five years of age.
    • Family members of people with chronic illnesses who cannot be vaccinated.
    • People living in isolated regions.
    The vaccine is not effective on children under six months of age and should not be given to people who already have a fever, Poirier said.

    "Every person that will have it will decrease the risk of having the flu for himself and for others," he said. "The vaccine as far as we know is really [effective]. It provides protection ?antibodies in 95 to 97 per cent of people within 10 days.?

    The capacity to deliver the vaccine should not be a problem, Poirier said, although he acknowledged it would take time for the province to receive enough vaccine to inoculate all of those who want it.

    The public will be notified when the vaccine will be available for different target groups, Poirier said. Information will be posted on the Health Ministry's website by Saturday.

    Regional officials are also expected to make announcements over the coming days.


    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

  • #2
    Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

    <!--/montrealgazette/header_nav.inc --><!-- navbarwrapper ends --><!-- navabr ends -->Shots start Monday in Quebec

    Most vulnerable have priority; H1N1 vaccine will be in short supply at first, so some may be turned away

    By KEVIN DOUGHERTY, The Gazette
    October 22, 2009



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    Sign of things to come? Americans wait in line yesterday to receive an H1N1 flu vaccine at a health centre in Rockville, Md.Photograph by: SAUL LOEB, AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES, The Gazette




    The second wave of the H1N1 flu virus is already hitting Quebec, the province's public health director said yesterday in announcing that vaccinations, starting with those most vulnerable, will begin on Monday.

    Alain Poirier said the second wave of the disease, which was expected in February or March, has already started, with 174 cases since September and Quebec's 28th death from H1N1 this week - an 87-year-old woman living in the L?vis region.

    Those being vaccinated starting Monday are those most at risk: pregnant women, adults under age 65 suffering from chronic diseases, children between 6 months and 9 years, health-care professionals and people living in remote regions of the province.

    Poirier warned that Quebec has only 400,000 doses of the vaccine - which received Health Canada approval yesterday - so some people lining up for their inoculations next week might be turned away.

    But Quebec expects to have an additional 600,000 to 800,000 doses a week once the vaccination campaign is under way. "We will make adjustments if everyone shows up at once," Health Minister Yves Bolduc added, admitting there could be logistical problems.

    "This will be the biggest campaign of its sort in the history of Quebec," Bolduc added.

    The vaccinations are free for all Quebec residents and will be administered seven days a week in temporary clinics set up across the province.
    People should present their medicare card or other ID so the government can track who has been vaccinated, Poirier said.

    Quebec's regional health agencies are expected to issue more information about the vaccination centres, and starting Saturday, their locations will be listed on the government website www.pandemiequebec.gouv.qc.ca

    The vaccine does not work on children younger than 6 months; for children under 9, two half-doses of the adjuvanted vaccine are recommended, with a three-week interval between shots.

    An adjuvant is an additive that boosts the vaccine's effectiveness. An unadjuvanted H1N1 vaccine will be available in two or three weeks for pregnant women who want to wait for the unboosted dose. But Poirier said health officials believe the adjuvanted vaccine is safe for pregnant women. Although adjuvants are commonly used in vaccines, it's a relatively new development to put them in flu vaccines, and there are not a lot of data on how they work in pregnant women.

    The adjuvanted H1N1 vaccine now available is between 95 and 98 per cent effective against H1N1, Poirier said.

    But many Quebecers have indicated they don't wish to be vaccinated. Poirier said that as people here realize this initiative is part of a global campaign against a worldwide virus, they will choose to get the vaccine.

    Poirier said he would be pleased if 80 per cent of Quebecers are vaccinated.

    People allergic to eggs cannot be vaccinated, because the vaccine is grown in an egg culture.

    People who are sick or have a fever will be turned away.
    Poirier said the adjuvanted vaccine might present more noticeable side effects than the seasonal flu vaccine, and it carries a risk of contracting Guillain-Barr? syndrome.

    But he said the odds of the vaccine resulting in a severe form of Guillan-Barr?, which can cause feelings of weakness or even paralysis, are about one in a million, and that Quebecers will be informed about all the vaccine's possible side effects.

    The vaccine takes five to 10 days to become effective.


    Read latest breaking news, updates, and headlines. Montreal Gazette offers information on latest national and international events & more.
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

      Quebec begins H1N1 vaccinations after school outbreak

      October 25, 2009 THE CANADIAN PRESS

      MONTREAL?Authorities in Quebec began vaccinations for the H1NI virus two days ahead of schedule Saturday after a school was hit by a second wave of the flu.

      A health centre in Trois-Pistoles, 200 kilometres northeast of Quebec City, confirmed Friday that 13 students from Arc-en-Ciel high school had mild cases of the flu. Almost a third of the 393 students were absent last week with various health complaints.

      Ottawa approved the H1N1 vaccine Wednesday and it will be available to some high-risk groups Monday, though schedules differ from region to region. Toronto clinics are to start vaccinations on Nov. 2

      The Quebec move came as U.S. President Barack Obama declared the pandemic a national emergency in an effort to speed treatment to thousands of infected people.
      White House officials said the effort is designed to make decisions easier when they need to be made.

      The declaration authorizes Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to bypass federal rules when opening off-site hospital centres. Flu activity ? virtually all of it the swine flu ? is now widespread in 46 U.S. states, the level of a typical winter flu season. It is estimated the flu has killed more than 1,000 Americans and hospitalized more than 20,000.

      A spokesman for the Ontario Health Ministry said neither move will affect Ontario's course of action because the province is already acting with a sense of urgency. "We're able to take those steps without having to invoke emergency legislation," said Kevin Finnerty.

      Ontario doctors, meanwhile, are asking employers to reconsider asking for a doctor's note from those absent from work due to flu.

      "In order to help reduce the transmission of H1N1 and other illnesses, Ontario's doctors believe it is wise for patients to stay home when they have flu-like symptoms," said Dr. Suzanne Strasberg, president of the Ontario Medical Association.

      Federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq said Canadians who don't get vaccinated are needlessly putting themselves and others at risk. "We're starting to see more cases in Canada, we're seeing more deaths and we don't know how bad it's going to be," she told the Calgary Sun.





      Toronto Star

      "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
      -Nelson Mandela

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability


        http://www.pandemiequebec.gouv.qc.ca/en/index.aspx@sujet=143.html

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

          Quebec swine flu vaccinations start ahead of schedule

          Updated: Sat Oct. 24 2009 6:53:43 PM

          <SCRIPT language=javascript type=text/javascript> var byString = ""; var sourceString = "ctvmontreal.ca"; if ((sourceString != "") && (byString != "")) { document.write(byString + ", "); } else { document.write(byString); }</SCRIPT>ctvmontreal.ca

          Quebec health officials are dealing with an outbreak of swine flu in a small Gaspe town, which prompted them to begin vaccinations against the H1N1 virus for health care workers two days ahead of schedule.

          Thirteen high school students at Arc-en-Ciel high school in Trois Pistoles, about 200 kilometres northeast of Quebec city, have come down with the swine flu.

          All of the cases were mild, but about a third of the school's 393 students stayed home last week because of various health complaints.

          The school will remain open, but officials are encouraging preventative measures such as hand washing.

          Vaccination schedule

          The vaccination schedule is the same across the province, with health care workers and first responders being vaccinated before the rest of the population.

          The second group to be vaccinated will be parents with infants, followed by pregnant women and families with young children.

          Healthy Quebecers over the age of five will be in the last group to be vaccinated.

          English information

          A government information booklet on the swine flu is now readily available in English. Last week, French-language versions of the document were delivered to every household in the province.

          English-language versions of the Self-care Guide were included in Saturday's edition of The Gazette.

          To access the information online in English, click here.

          The numbers

          As of Saturday, roughly 260 Quebecers had confirmed cases of swine flu, according to public health officials.

          At least 55 people in Montreal have contracted the virus, with six people sick enough to be hospitalized.

          Almost 1,300 Montrealers got the swine flu in the spring and summer, and the second wave -- which is expected to last through Christmas -- is expected to affect up to 35 percent of the population.

          With files from The Canadian Press

          http://montreal.ctv.ca/servlet/an/lo...b=MontrealHome
          "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
          -Nelson Mandela

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

            I have a friend in a monastery in Quebec. A person from the health department came out and gave them an excellent lecture on H1N1. All 50 of the monks will be vaccinated regardless of age next week. Canada's response to H1N1 seems so well-organized and efficient. Here everything seems so patchy and haphazard. I hope my perceptions are wrong. We don't even have the vaccine yet except for health care workers.
            We all should know that diversity makes for a rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color.
            Maya Angelou

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

              H1N1 vaccinations late in Montreal

              Initial batch includes 155,000 swine flu shots for Montreal

              Charlie Fidelman, Montreal Gazette: Monday, October 26, 2009 1:57 PM

              MONTREAL ?

              Where is the H1N1 vaccine? In Montreal, it is now en route.

              Montreal?s mass vaccination announced last week ? the goal is 1.4 million people within two months ? got off to a late start Monday: delivery and taking possession.

              Montreal health department officials are scrambling to distribute 155,000 doses that were delivered Friday and Sunday night.

              That means workers at most Montreal hospitals are not rolling up their sleeves today for the shot because there?s none on site.

              Montreal?s two university hospital centres ? Centre hospitalier de l?Universit? de Montr?al and McGill University Health Centre ? say they plan to start the employee flu jab program as of Nov. 2.


              For information about vaccination centres in Montreal, visit

              Map: H1N1 vaccination centres in Montreal (PDF)


              http://www.globalmaritimes.com/healt...tml?id=2146720#
              "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
              -Nelson Mandela

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                H1N1 vaccination rolls out in Montreal

                Last Updated: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 | 12:15 PM ET

                CBC News


                Gynecologist Andr? Fortier gets his H1N1 vaccination from Marie-No?l Ouellette in Longueuil, Que. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

                Quebec health officials say the province is in its second wave of H1N1 infections, just as a mass vaccination campaign gets off the ground in major cities.

                Public health officials in Montreal say widespread vaccination started at 56 different medical sites across the island on Wednesday morning.

                The first round of doses targets medical staff and seriously ill patients in hospitals first, before other priority groups such as pregnant women and children are called as of Nov. 6.

                David Levine, director general of Montreal's Public Health Agency, said a second wave of the flu is spreading, but the situation is under control.

                Indicators such as new diagnoses, test requests and calls to the city's health information line indicate that "people are either more worried, or have more symptoms than even a month ago," Levine said at a news conference on Wednesday.

                At least 400 new cases of the flu have been reported in the last week, up from 70 cases two weeks ago. Eight schools in the Montreal area have reported cases of the flu.

                Several students at McGill University and at the Universit? du Qu?bec ? Montr?al (UQ?M) have also contracted the respiratory virus.
                Health authorities are hoping to dispense 86,000 doses of the vaccine in upcoming days.

                Quebec's Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists are recommending health officials advance their vaccination schedules for pregnant women past 20 weeks' gestation, regardless of concerns about the adjuvant.

                The association is recommending pregnant women at 20 weeks or more be inoculated immediately, even if it is with a dose containing the adjuvant.

                An adjuvant is an additive that serves to boost the body's immune-system reaction to the vaccine. There are concerns about its side-effects during pregnancy.

                "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                -Nelson Mandela

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                  Quebec takes city's top health official to task

                  Why the delay? Minister demands. 8 schools report outbreaks of swine flu; ERs swamped at pediatric hospitals

                  CHARLIE FIDELMAN, The Gazette: Thursday, October 29, 2009 12:13 PM

                  MONTREAL - Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc chastised Montreal's top health official for failing to deploy the city's H1N1 vaccination program as planned months in advance.

                  Concerned that further inoculation delays would put people at risk for swine flu infection now that the virus is in hyper speed, Bolduc personally called David Levine, head of the Montreal Health and Social Services Agency, to demand an explanation.

                  Bolduc made the call late Monday night, said his press attache Marie-?ve B?dard.

                  There was no reason for Montreal's delay, B?dard said.

                  Not only did the city have the vaccine on hand "for quite a while," but also the authority to hand over the doses to the 12 local health agencies responsible for handling the campaign at various sites, she said. "So the minister found it difficult to understand why Montreal hadn't started its vaccination." Levine promised that the plan would be on track by 10 a.m. yesterday, with the vaccine delivered to every hospital, clinic and nursing home.

                  But at a press briefing held yesterday morning, Levine said that as far as he was concerned, there were no delays.

                  Accompanied by Richard Lessard, head of public health, and Louise Massicotte, in charge of the vaccine program at local health agencies, Levine explained that plans initially called for a mid-November start date and it was a huge logistical job for the agency to prepare for an earlier start on Oct. 26.

                  In fact, Lessard added, it was actually a good thing that Montreal did not start immunizing Monday because only that evening the vaccine manufacturer provided health authorities with new handling directives.

                  Sensitive to light and heat, the vaccine itself must be kept at temperatures between 2 to 8 degrees C, and if not used within 24 hours of being mixed with the adjuvant and one hour of filling a syringe, it will expire, Lessard said.

                  Back in Bolduc's office, B?dard, however, dismissed these "new" vaccine directives: "This is the first time I've heard of this. I don't know why he said that. The procedures have been known for a long time ... and Montreal was in charge of sending (early) vaccine to northern Quebec." Neither Levine nor Lessard was available to comment.

                  Why does Quebec seem to be running late with its public vaccine plan - set to open in Montreal next week - compared with other provinces that are opening clinics for the general public today? The vaccine schedule is dictated by the weekly number of doses made available by Ottawa, B?dard said, and each province will get its equitable share of it and each has its own vaccination priorities.

                  "We wanted to guarantee that those most at risk will get it first," B?dard said, to avoid a situation where demand could outstrip vaccine supply.
                  Montreal has 95 confirmed cases of H1N1, and 12 have been hospitalized, including two in intensive care.

                  But that's an underestimate because the agency is not tracking the illness in real time. The agency has recommended that people stay home with flu signs - dry cough and fever - rather than sap hospital resources with demands for H1N1 testing, unless symptoms start to include breathing difficulties.

                  Quebec's Info-Sante call centre has added more manpower to staff the 8-1-1 line, which is getting a spike in calls, while hospital emergency rooms are reporting swine flu traffic is up significantly.

                  Montreal's two pediatric hospitals, Ste. Justine and the Montreal Children's, are warning that their ERs are being overwhelmed with parents demanding their children be tested for swine flu despite showing only mild flu-like symptoms and fever.

                  Eight Montreal schools reported a outbreak of swine flu illness in the last 24 hours, double the number of schools hit during the past two weeks. An outbreak means more than 10 per cent of students are absent with flu symptoms.

                  Several parents have told The Gazette they are worried about their children, given a Toronto teen's death Monday from the virus within 48 hours of developing minor cold symptoms. Also, they are upset that the health agency will not identify schools where outbreaks occurred.

                  Levine's agency says it is monitoring the situation and will change vaccine priorities if the virus is causing more complications or deaths.

                  Widespread vaccination started at 56 sites across the island yesterday, targeting the seriously ill and medical staff in hospitals and other medical facilities.

                  Such priority groups as pregnant women and children are next, on Nov. 6, but Quebec's Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is recommending health officials advance their vaccination schedules and immediately inoculate pregnant women past 20 weeks gestation.

                  - - -
                  H1N1

                  Get the latest updates about the pandemic, the government's response and the resources at your disposal at www.montrealgazette.com/health/swine-flu/index.html

                  Vaccination sites by region

                  Montreal
                  http://vaccination.msss.gouv.qc.ca/carte_region.php?region=06

                  Off-island suburbs
                  http://vaccination.msss.gouv.qc.ca/carte_region.php?region=16

                  Laval
                  http://vaccination.msss.gouv.qc.ca/carte_region.php?region=13

                  Mass vaccination schedules
                  Nov. 6 start:
                  - Parents with children under 6 months.
                  - Adults with immune deficiencies.
                  - Families with members who are immune deficient.

                  Nov. 9 start:
                  - Pregnant women.
                  - Children (age 6 months to 5 years) and their parents.

                  Nov. 16 start:
                  - Children age 18 and under with a chronic illness.

                  Nov. 23 start:
                  - Adults age 18 to 65 with a chronic illness.

                  Dec. 7 start:
                  - Healthy adults and children older than age 5.

                  For information online: pandemiequebec.gouv.qc.ca/en/index.aspx@sujet=143.html
                  "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                  -Nelson Mandela

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                    Quebecers queue for H1N1 shot

                    Last Updated: Friday, October 30, 2009 | 12:46 PM ET

                    CBC News

                    Nearly 1,000 people lined up before dawn on Friday at a makeshift vaccination clinic north of Montreal, where health officials launched a local H1N1 inoculation this week, ahead of many other regions in the province.

                    The clinic in Saint-Eustache only opened at 12:30 p.m. on Friday, but hundreds of people braved the cool and wet weather to score a spot in line as early as 5 a.m.

                    CBC's French-language service reported that one woman even slept in her car in order to secure a spot at the front of the line.

                    The clinic was overrun on Thursday with nearly 2,000 people, many from outside the community, after news spread that anyone willing to wait would get vaccinated.

                    Many people who brought their children with the hopes of jumping the priority queue established by Quebec's Health Ministry were enraged when they were turned away at the end of the day.

                    On Friday, authorities said they would turn away people who don't live in the region and who don't fit the priority criteria, in order to keep lines more manageable. The clinic can only vaccinate 225 people an hour.

                    Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc insists the vaccination campaign is under control despite widespread reports of lineups, delays and insufficient stock of the Tamiflu vaccine.

                    Speaking in Gatineau, Bolduc said it's up to local health authorities to decide whether they are willing to inoculate people who don't live in their region.

                    Quebec is receiving more than 400,000 doses of Tamiflu a week, he said, countering accusations from Opposition Parti Qu?b?cois that the province is getting shortchanged by federal health authorities.


                    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                    -Nelson Mandela

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                      Seniors asked to wait for shots as H1N1-vaccine shortage looms


                      By Richard Watts, Times Colonist
                      October 30, 2009




                      People line up for flu shots Thursday at Westshore Town Centre.

                      Photograph by: Darren Stone, Times Colonist


                      Seniors are being asked to stay away from the special clinics doling out the H1N1 vaccine after public-health officials learned vaccine delivery is slowing down.

                      Dr. Perry Kendall, provincial health officer, said word came from federal health officials yesterday of the impending reduction in distribution of the H1N1 vaccine because of production problems.

                      ?This means our vaccination program will be somewhat more targeted, somewhat more phased and will probably take longer than we thought it would,? said Kendall.

                      As a result, public-health nurses will stop handing out shots to seniors for the seasonal flu and H1N1, said Dr. Richard Stanwick, chief medical officer of health for the Vancouver Island Health Authority.

                      Instead, they will focus on offering the H1N1 vaccine to this week?s priority groups: pregnant women, people under the age of 65 with underlying health conditions such as asthma or diabetes, those in remote communities and First Nations people.

                      Stanwick said seniors can take confidence from findings showing people born in 1957 or earlier already have some immunity.

                      ?With age comes not only wisdom but also immunity,? he said. ?These people are the best group, the most likely to fight off swine flu.

                      ?Right now we need to focus on the groups that are at the greatest risk.?
                      He also noted the only strain of flu now circulating in the community is the H1N1 variety. The seasonal flu has not arrived in B.C. and historically has never turned up before late December. In recent years, it?s been showing up in February and March.

                      Anybody who wants a shot for seasonal flu can still approach their doctor or buy one from a pharmacy.

                      Those in line for H1N1 shots next week include children aged six months to five years, household contacts of infants and health-care workers, but the latter category has been narrowed down to include only those working on the front lines, such as intensive-care units or emergency rooms.

                      Some H1N1 vaccine is expected to be distributed to GPs next week.
                      VIHA?s first mass-immunization clinic, in donated space at Westshore Town Centre, went smoothly Thursday with hundreds of people vaccinated.

                      ?It?s been fantastic ? we?ve got through hundreds and hundreds of people and everyone seems really happy,? said Sandra Herbison, manager of public health units.

                      Volunteers staffed tables to meet people as they entered. Security guards assigned times for people to come back and line up, and numbers were distributed.

                      The result was that nobody had to wait for hours in line outside, unless they showed up prior to the clinic?s scheduled 1 p.m. opening.
                      Previous clinics in much smaller spaces earlier in the week ended up with people standing in line, in some cases for hours, before being turned away.

                      On Thursday Melissa Ngawati showed up with her two children, Kiri, 8, and Quinn, 10, at 11 a.m. and called her husband, Tony, to join them when it looked as if they were about to be admitted to the building. The entire family is asthmatic, so they were on the eligible list.

                      Ngawati said the time in line was made bearable by a donation of baked treats from a nearby Cob?s Bakery for those waiting. ?I think they?ve done really well ? it?s really well organized.?

                      The federal government said it was informed by Canada?s H1N1 vaccine manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, that the vaccine supply will be lower next week because its facility only has one production line for two types of vaccine ? one for pregnant women and one for everyone else.

                      The mass clinic at Westshore Town Centre continues Friday.

                      Read latest breaking news, updates, and headlines. Montreal Gazette offers information on latest national and international events & more.
                      "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                      -Nelson Mandela

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability


                        Thousands of people lined up to get the flu vaccine in St. Eustache (Oct. 29, 2009)
                        More lineups for limited H1N1 vaccine

                        Updated: Fri Oct. 30 2009 4:55:44 PM
                        ctvmontreal.ca

                        There were more lineups for the H1N1 vaccine Friday, as hundreds of people in the Montreal area waited hours to receive their dose of the limited supply.

                        In St. Eustache, north of Laval, more than 1,000 people were turned away Thursday, and many returned Friday to receive their shot.

                        "I was here since 8 this morning, but I came yesterday, and waited four hours for nothing, because at 7:30, they closed the door. We were only 50 people left, but they refused to let us in because they said, 'We finish at 7:30 - but they had the vaccine,'" complained one patient while waiting for the shot.

                        The lineups come amid confusion about directions from the government. Priority was set among certain high-risk groups first:
                        • children 6 months to 5 years;
                        • people with chronic illnesses;
                        • health care workers.
                        Earlier this week, however, government health officials admitted no one would be turned away.

                        "The question was asked if someone shows up and they're very anxious and they're very worried and it's really starting to affect their health should they get the vaccine," said David Levine, director general of Montreal's Public Health Agency, earlier this week.

                        The news sparked lengthy queues at open vaccination sites, particularly because very few have open so far, prompting residents from throughout the city.

                        Now, health officials are asking the population to respect the priority scheduling, as well as show I.D., proving local residency. The move comes in face of fears the supply will be extinguished too soon.

                        "I think if there's a certain amount of vaccines available they should limit it to the certain area that they're doing .

                        Quebec is receiving 400,000 doses of the vaccine every week, means every Quebecer will have the option to be vaccinated by late December.

                        More vaccination centres on the island of Montreal are expected be open by next week.

                        Vaccination sites:

                        Vaccinations for members of the general population who are in good health won't begin until Dec. 7.

                        The following locations have been named as H1N1 vaccination sites:

                        Open 7 days a week, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. from Nov. 6 to 15
                        - Lachine General Hospital - 3320 Notre Dame St.
                        - Carrefour Angrignon - 7077 Newman Blvd.
                        - Patro Le Pr?vost Community Centre - 7355 Christophe-Colomb Ave.
                        - St-Laurent Leisure Centre - 1375 Grenet St.
                        - Southwest Physergo medical clinic - 5260 Verdun Rd.
                        - CLSC Plateau-Mont-Royal - 4625 De Lorimier Ave.
                        - Coll?ge Reine-Marie - 9300 Saint-Michel Blvd.
                        - Allancroft School - 265 Allancroft Rd.
                        - Fr?d?rick-Banting School - 11135 Alfred Ave.
                        - Rivi?re-des-Prairies Hospital - 7070 Perras Blvd.
                        - Cavendish Mall - 5800 Cavendish Blvd.
                        - Th??tre du Quartier - 3990 Notre-Dame St. W
                        Open Nov. 6, 7, 8 only:
                        - CLSC Hochelaga-Maisonneuve - 4201 Ontario St.
                        Open Nov. 9:
                        - Olympic Stadium - 4545 Pierre-de-Courbertin St.
                        Open 7 days a week, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., beginning Nov. 16
                        - Lachine General Hospital - 3320 Notre Dame St.
                        - Carrefour Angrignon - 7077 Newman Blvd.
                        - Patro Le Pr?vost Community Centre - 7355 Christophe-Colomb Ave.
                        - St-Laurent Leisure Centre - 1375 Grenet St.
                        - Southwest Physergo medical clinic - 5260 Verdun Rd.
                        - CLSC Plateau-Mont-Royal - 4625 De Lorimier Ave.
                        - Edouard-Rivet Recreation Centre - 11111 Notre-Dame St. E
                        - Coll?ge Reine-Marie - 9300 Saint-Michel Blvd.
                        - Allancroft School - 265 Allancroft Rd.
                        - Fr?d?rick-Banting School - 11135 Alfred Ave.
                        - Spring Garden Elementary School - 175 Sonata Ave.
                        - Rivi?re-des-Prairies Hospital - 7070 Perras Blvd.
                        - Cavendish Mall - 5800 Cavendish Blvd.
                        - Palais des congr?s - 1001 Place Jean-Paul-Riopelle
                        - Olympic Stadium - 4545 Pierre-de-Coubertin St.
                        - Th??tre du Quartier - 3990 Notre-Dame St. W
                        Open Saturdays and Sundays only, beginning Nov. 21
                        - Coll?ge Mont-Saint-Louis - 1700 Henri-Bourassa Blvd. E
                        Laval plans
                        In Laval, people can get vaccinated at the following location:
                        - 2228 des Laurentides Blvd. (Old Canadian Tire)
                        Opening hours are as follows:
                        Monday, Tuesday, Thursday Saturday & Sunday: 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. (CLOSED ON WEDNESDAY)
                        Dates are as follows:
                        Nov. 5-10 & Nov. 12-14 :
                        - People under 65 suffering from a chronic illness
                        - People in contact with children under 6 months
                        - Pregnant women
                        Nov. 15-17 & Nov. 19-21
                        - Children from 6 months to 9 years, and their immediate families
                        - People in contact with those who are immune deficient
                        Nov. 22-24 & Nov. 26-28
                        - Youths aged 10-18 and their guardians
                        - People aged 65 or older
                        Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1 & Dec. 3-5
                        - Open to all

                        There were more lineups for the H1N1 vaccine Friday, as hundreds of people in the Montreal area waited hours to receive their dose of the limited supply.
                        "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                        -Nelson Mandela

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                          <TABLE width=1 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle><SMALL><IMG style="BORDER-TOP-WIDTH: 0px; BORDER-LEFT-WIDTH: 0px; BORDER-BOTTOM-WIDTH: 0px; WIDTH: 150px; BORDER-RIGHT-WIDTH: 0px" alt="Quebecers have had to wait up to eight hours to get the H1N1 vaccine at the Longueuil arena on Montreal's South Shore.
                          <i>(CBC)</i>" onerror="document.getElementById('feedsimgdiv').st yle.display='none'" src="http://images.sympatico.ca/images/Feeds/cbcLocalNews/mtl-swine-1103.jpg"> Quebecers have had to wait up to eight hours to get the H1N1 vaccine at the Longueuil arena on Montreal's South Shore.
                          (CBC) </SMALL>


                          </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                          Quebecers camp out to get H1N1 shot
                          03/11/2009 9:22:09 AM
                          CBC News

                          The lineup started before dawn on Tuesday at a Longueuil arena on Montreal's South Shore, where dozens of Quebecers camped out - some with their children in tow - to get the swine flu vaccine.

                          It's the second day a pre-dawn queue formed at the makeshift clinic, where the wait on Monday was as long as eight hours, despite diligent work by health professionals administering H1N1 influenza vaccines non-stop.

                          Complaints about Quebec's mass vaccination program against the swine flu continue to swell as Montreal falls behind other cities in terms of getting people inoculated.

                          In some parts of the province, the inoculation campaign has progressed to at-risk people including pregnant women, young children and the chronically ill.

                          But Montreal is a bit behind schedule, Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc said in an interview with CBC Radio's Daybreak on Tuesday morning.

                          Bolduc said he understands peoples' concerns but cautioned that panic is not the answer.

                          The best strategy to protect public health is to follow the priority list for vaccination, he said.

                          "For the moment, the experts suggest who needs the vaccine sooner," he said in a telephone interview.

                          "We have to respect that if we want to save more lives. Everyone wants to be vaccinated sooner, but we don't have a choice at this moment."

                          Bolduc, who got his shot last week, said his wife and teenaged son have yet to be vaccinated, so he understands parents' concerns about their own children.

                          Bolduc's office confirmed that Quebec still hasn't administered all the doses it has received since the launch of the federal inoculation campaign.

                          In an emergency House of Commons session Monday night, Federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq insisted there is no shortage of the vaccine and every Canadian who wants the shot will get it by Christmas.

                          Federal opposition parties criticized the Conservative minority government for how it has handled the H1N1 risk.

                          GlaxoSmithKline, the Quebec-based manufacturer of the vaccine, was forced to slow down production last week to increase the number of doses with an adjuvant - an immune booster - in order to accommodate demand for pregnant women.

                          "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                          -Nelson Mandela

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                            Local swine flu vaccination centre opens Friday

                            Article online since November 3rd 2009, 13:24

                            Local swine flu vaccination centre opens Friday

                            For Westmounters worried by recent media reports about rapidly spreading cases of swine flu, Sant? Montr?al announced this week that an additional vaccination centre against the H1N1 flu virus will be open in Alexis Nihon Plaza, 1500 Atwater Ave., beginning tomorrow, Nov. 6, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily.

                            It should be noted that the first period of vaccination is intended for parents of infants up to six months of age, for persons with a weakened immune system who are able to receive the vaccine, and for the family members of individuals whose immune system is weakened and cannot receive the vaccine.

                            "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                            -Nelson Mandela

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Quebec - Novel H1N1 Vaccine Availability

                              Coupons will cut wait for vaccine: minister
                              Montreal officials speed up vaccination schedule

                              Last Updated: Tuesday, November 3, 2009
                              CBC News

                              Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc says a new coupon system will be put in place to help prevent the lengthy lineups at H1N1 vaccination clinics in some parts of the province.

                              The province has faced criticism for its vaccination plan as thousands of people, including those at high risk of contracting swine flu, have been forced to wait hours in cold temperatures.

                              Bolduc said the coupons will provide patients with an appointment for their vaccination and would be available in the Mont?r?gie region and Quebec City, starting Wednesday.

                              The coupons will be available in Montreal starting Thursday, Bolduc said.

                              The system has been in place in the Gatineau region since Friday and has been successful in eliminating lineups, Bolduc said.

                              Asked whether he was concerned the coupons could spark a black market for vaccination appointments, the minister said officials were doing the best they could.

                              "We have to do something for the lineup," Bolduc said. "We think this is the best system, even if it is not the perfect system."

                              The province's director of public health, Dr. Alain Poirier, dismissed accusations the system has been disorganized.

                              He said the distribution of vaccines has been going smoothly in some regions, while in others the demand has been higher than expected.

                              There were also some logistical delays that prevented some regions from starting their vaccination campaigns on time, Poirier said.

                              Everyone who wants the vaccine should be able to get it before Christmas, Poirier said.

                              The number of cases of the H1N1 virus in Quebec is on the rise but the flu has not become more virulent, said Poirier. In the previous 24 hours, he said, there were six cases of the illness that had required hospital treatement.

                              Montreal to accelerate vaccination

                              In Montreal, officials at the regional health agency said they would hold a news conference Thursday to announce changes to the vaccination schedule in the region.

                              In response to concerns about the delay in the vaccination of at-risk people in Montreal, Bolduc said he has asked regional health officials to speed up the process.

                              "If some people are more anxious to get the vaccine, I think our job is to relieve this anxiety and get the vaccine to these people as soon as possible," Bolduc said.

                              While some regions have already begun vaccinating parents with children younger than six months old, people with suppressed immune systems and families with members who have suppressed immune systems but cannot get the vaccine, Montreal is still focused on vaccinating health-care workers and patients in hospitals.

                              Officials in the region do not expect to start vaccinating other at-risk people until Friday.

                              The lineup started before dawn on Tuesday at a Longueuil arena on Montreal's South Shore, where dozens of Quebecers camped out - some with children in tow - to get the swine flu vaccine.

                              It was the second day a predawn queue formed at the makeshift clinic, where the wait on Monday was as long as eight hours, despite health professionals administering vaccines non-stop.

                              In an interview with CBC Radio's Daybreak on Tuesday morning Bolduc, who got his shot last week, said his wife and teenage son have yet to be vaccinated, so he understands parents' concerns about their children.

                              Bolduc's office confirmed that Quebec still hasn't administered all the doses it has received since the launch of the federal inoculation campaign.
                              Health Minister Yves Bolduc says he has asked officials in Montreal to accelerate their vaccination plan. (CBC)

                              'If some people are more anxious to get the vaccine, I think our job is to relieve this anxiety and get the vaccine to these people as soon as possible.'?Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc



                              "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                              -Nelson Mandela

                              Comment

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