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Montreal

Advocates call on Quebec to prioritize those with developmental disabilities for COVID-19 vaccine

Advocates for people with developmental disabilities, especially Down syndrome, are asking the province to prioritize them when it comes to the vaccine rollout because they say they are more at risk of contracting and dying from COVID-19.

Research suggests people with Down syndrome are more vulnerable to the coronavirus

Hannah Lusthaus, 43, of Montreal was diagnosed with Down Syndrome at a young age. And now her mom, Evelyn Lusthaus, (on right) is advocating for people like her daughter to be higher up on the vaccine priority list. (Chlo Ranaldi/CBC)

Worried thather daughter Hannah could catchCOVID-19 in her assisted living space, Evelyn Lusthausdecided last year to move her back home.

Hannah, 43, was born with Down syndrome, as is roughly one in every 770 newbornsin Quebec.

"I'm concerned that she'll get COVIDand that she'll become extremely sick," Evelynsaid. "And she'll be hospitalized, she won't understand what's going on and she'll be alone."

Her concerns only grew after readinga study published last fall in the United Kingdom that shows people with Down syndrome are four times more likely to be hospitalized from COVID-19 and 10 times more likely to die from it.

Lusthaus alsopointedto theCenters of for Disease Control and Prevention, which lists people withDown syndrome as being more at-risk of severe illness from COVID-19.

So, her family launched a petition to ask the provincial government to place people with developmental disabilities higher on Quebec's priority list for vaccinations.

A grassroots campaign to lobby Quebec City

Currently, Hannah Lusthaus is in the eighth of 10 groups listed as priority cohorts people under the age of 60 with chronic health conditions or health problems placing them at higher risk of contracting COVID-19.

Her mother, and other advocates, argue that's a big mistake.

"We want [the province] to look, see and acknowledge this is more complex for people with a disability and for them to be prioritized," Lusthaus explained. "Not according to their age, but to their condition and medical needs."

She's not alone.

Genevive Labrecque, the director-general of Regroupement pour la Trisomie 21, anon-profit organization that works with people with Down syndrome, also launched a campaignasking people to write a letter to their local MNAs to demandthe change.

It's something some Canadian provinces have begun to look at. Saskatchewan's government is adding adults with significant disabilities in their second phase of vaccinations.

British Columbia has indicated it will vaccinate people with severe disabilities in itsthird phase withdetails to come.

Overlooking age for people with Down syndrome

There is evidence to supportthose decisions.

Dr.Yona Lunsky, the director of the Azrieli Adult Neurodevelopmental Centre at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, highlighted researchthatsuggestspeople with Down syndrome are likely to suffer from associated medical conditions.

Therefore, they're at higher risk of COVID-19complications and severe cases of the diseaseat a younger age.

"If we're thinking about supporting people in their older age when they're more vulnerable, we have to recognize that people with Down syndrome, their older age as a younger age," said Lunsky.

"So to wait until they hit 80 to say now, that's an extremely high-risk group. They're already high-risk and they're intheir 40s and their 50s."

Lunsky hopesprovinces across the country will take theresearch into consideration as they work through their vaccine priority lists.

Province not planning changes to priority list

A spokesperson for the health ministry said the governmentacknowledges how difficult the pandemic and confinement measures have been for people with developmental and other disabilities. But, the department said, the risks for people in that populationgroup are not equal.

And its priority list is based on recommendations by the Quebec Immunization Committee (CIQ), an independent body made up ofpublic health specialists.

Dr. Nicholas Brousseau, the CIQ chair and a researcher at the Institut national de sant publique du Qubec, said vaccine shortages have forced the province's hand.

For now, the priority is older people, especially those aged 69 and older, and the elderly with chronic conditions who still face the highest risk of catching and dying from COVID-19.

While he acknowledged there is growing literature about the risks for people with Down syndrome, it has yet to weigh in the balance forthe CIQ'srecommendations to the province.

Michael Leclair was concerned about his daughter Megan (right) being exposed to COVID-19 in the community, so she has been staying in a group home for the past three months. (Submitted by Michael Leclair)

How the pandemic pushed afamily apart

Michael Leclair decided, given the risks for people with Down syndrome, thatthe safest place for his daughter Meganwas in a group home.

"My daughter hasn't lived at home in months," he explained. "I want to make sure she remains in a bubble."

Being left out of the province's vaccination program speaks to a larger issue, he said: people with disabilitiesbeingignored or made to feel invisible.

"I think it's highly important that parents have peace of mind and know that at least their children have an opportunity to be vaccinated and to have some sort of defence against a very unpredictable virus," he said.