Toronto Star Referrer

Booster deadline raises fears at LTC homes

Union, industry groups say government’s target of Jan. 28 is too soon for many workers

HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

Most Ontario long-term-care workers have just under two weeks to get their third COVID-19 vaccine doses, but union and industry groups say more time is needed to meet the government’s target as staff infections reach record levels and workers struggle to access appointments.

The government has mandated booster doses for workers in the sector, citing the heightened risk to vulnerable residents living in the homes that saw thousands of deaths and outbreaks earlier in the pandemic.

Workers, volunteers and students have until Jan. 28 to get their third shots and stay on the job, if enough time has passed since their second dose. People who became eligible after Jan. 1 have until March 14 to get third shots, and those with recent COVID-19 infections will also have more time to get their jabs.

The Long-Term Care Ministry says the majority of staff are currently eligible for third doses. As of Jan. 12, close to 64 per cent of those people had already gotten third shots, a spokesman said Friday, adding that “the expectation remains that eligible staff receive a third dose by Jan. 28.”

But with the Omicron variant driving outbreaks, worker absences and staff infections to recordbreaking numbers, those on the inside say the target — though important to protecting residents — will be nearly impossible to reach sector-wide in time.

“We should aim to get it done on the 28th but understanding the circumstances of each one of these homes,” said Sharleen Stewart, president of SEIU Healthcare, a union representing long-term care workers in the province. “It really is down to individual homes and circumstances right now.”

She said extending the deadline on a case-by-case basis would make sense, especially as workers struggle with intense workloads due to staff shortages, which predate the pandemic but have worsened during the Omicron wave.

“Right now, everything in the lives of these front-line workers is a challenge,” she said.

Clinics run in the homes would help get more people vaccinated faster, Stewart said — something that’s happening in some places, but not across the province. It’s become challenging for people to book appointments outside of work, too, now that all adults in the province are eligible for boosters and clinics prioritizing education workers and children ahead of schools reopening on Monday.

Lisa Levin, CEO of AdvantAge Ontario, which represents municipal and non-profit long-term care homes, said there have been “quite a few barriers” to meeting the Jan. 28 deadline for booster shots.

“A lot of homes are not going to be able to meet it and we’re hoping that the ministry can delay it,” Levin said in an interview on Friday.

Hesitancy is also an issue, she noted, with some people unwilling to mix vaccine types, and others blindsided by the new requirement to get three doses, which was announced in late December, a few weeks after the mandatory twodose rule took effect.

She also noted that because Ontario has not mandated vaccines for any other sector, some people can choose to go work elsewhere in the health system rather than meet the third-dose deadline.

“A lot of homes are not going to be able to meet it and we’re hoping that the ministry can delay it.

LISA LEVIN ADVANTAGE ONTARIO

NEWS | CANADA

en-ca

2022-01-17T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-17T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://thestarepaper.pressreader.com/article/281578064029864

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