Winnipeg doctor says staff didn't know rules when he called to book COVID-19 vaccine - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:41 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Winnipeg doctor says staff didn't know rules when he called to book COVID-19 vaccine

A microbiologistfrom St. Boniface Hospital was frustrated by the inefficient and ill-informed treatment he says he receivedwhen trying to book an appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine.

Dr. PhilippeLagac-Wiens says he was denied by operator who had wrong screening tool

Dr. Philippe Lagac-Wiens, a microbiologistfrom St. Boniface Hospital, was denied booking a COVID-19 immunization appointment, despite being eligible. (Submitted by Philippe R. S. Lagac-Wiens)

A microbiologistfrom St. Boniface Hospital was frustrated by the inefficient and ill-informed treatment he says he receivedwhen trying to book an appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine.

Dr. PhilippeLagac-Wiens works in a lab that tests for COVID-19 and he is in contact with patients who have the virus. The Manitoba government expanded its immunization eligibility criteria Tuesday to includehealth-care workers who come in contact withpatients and handle COVID-19 specimensin alaboratory, makingLagac-Wienseligible to receivehis first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

But when he called to book his time, the microbiologist was told he did not qualify because the person on the other end of the line did not have the updated screening tool.

"I pleaded with her to look at the website, I pleaded with her for a supervisor to talk to about this,"Lagac-Wiens said."She informed me that her supervisor was the government of Manitoba."

With the exception of First Nations and personal care homes in Manitoba, which will be receiving doses of the Moderna vaccine in the coming days and weeks, only certain health-care workers are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

Currently, health-care workers who come in direct contact with patients and work in critical care units, COVID-19 immunization or testing sites, labs handling COVID-19 specimens, a designated COVID-19 hospital ward, or a correctional facility are eligible for the vaccine.

Aside from First Nations and personal care homes in Manitoba which will be receiving doses of the Moderna vaccine, only certain health-care workers are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

For those workers there is no age restriction. But onlyacute and long-term care facility workerswho were born by Dec. 31, 1975, are eligible.

WhenLagac-Wienscalled Tuesday, he was on hold for 90 minutes before the operator denied him for not being born before 1976.

Lagac-Wiens tried explaining that there had been a change. The woman said she could schedule him in, but she would have to mark Lagac-Wiens as ineligible and he could be issued a fine when he arrived for his appointment, he said.

"I was very tempted to say, 'Yes, schedule me,' because I knew in my heart that I was eligible. But I didn't want to create any trouble. So in the end, we had to part ways."

Most Manitobans understand that only certain portions of the population are currently eligible for the vaccine and are following thatcriteria, a provincial government spokesperson said via email.

"While we have heard reports that there may have been a very small number of people who have tried to get around this process, there is nothing that indicates this is a significant problem and we do not have any stats to provide," the spokesperson said.

A Manitoba government spokesperson says there have been reports of queue jumping for the vaccine, but not enough for it to be a problem. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

"We investigate all complaints and have put a process in place that will audit compliance with eligibility criteria."

Determined, Lagac-Wiensagain called to book his appointment at 6 a.m. Wednesday morning and was on hold for 45 minutes until someone picked up. The otherperson on the line had the updatedscreening tool, but they almost excluded him again,Lagac-Wienssaid.

"They didn't ask the next set of questionsthe new ones," he said, adding that Wednesday's call went generally better.

Lagac-Wiens appreciates being able to get the vaccine so early, but he believes the process could be more efficient.

"There has been no clarity, or very limited clarity, about who's eligible," he said."What is the definition of patient contact or patient care?

"Ask me whether or nothousekeeping staff on a COVIDward is at risk of transmitting and acquiring COVID. I'll tell you, absolutely. They should be a priority. But because they are not deemed patient care, they're not eligible."

Lagac-Wiens has colleagues who are eligible for an immunization appointment but have given up because they were on hold for hours, he said.

The trend doesn't bode well for the immunization program as it begins opening up to more of the public, he said.

With files from Bartley Kives and Peggy Lam