Coming soon to a park near you: vaccine van aims to make it easier for Montreal youth to get their shots - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:51 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Coming soon to a park near you: vaccine van aims to make it easier for Montreal youth to get their shots

Montreal's vaccination campaign is hitting the road this summer with the 'Vaccivan,' a specially equipped vehicle that will aim to meet young people aged 18 to 35 in parks and offer them first doses without an appointment.

Specially equipped 'Vaccivan' will administer vaccines in west-end parks this summer

Montreal takes its vaccination campaign on the road

3 years ago
Duration 1:45
The 'Vaccivan' aims to meet young people aged 18 to 35 in parks and offer them first doses without an appointment.

Hours afterKais Ferrag received his first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, he was out playing soccer on a field in Kent Park, located in Cte-des-Neiges, like he does almost every weekday.

"I had my dose, I came here at noon and I played. I had no problem.I felt great," he said.

Now, thanks to an initiative by the local health authority, theCIUSSS du Centre-Ouest-de-l'le-de-Montral and the Jean Coutupharmacies network, people like Ferrag won't have to travel farther than a park to receive a vaccine this summer.

On Friday, the health agency and its partners launched the Vaccivan, a vehicle specially equipped to administer COVID-19 vaccines, with the goalofboostingthe vaccination rate ofyouths in the city's west end.

"I think it's a very good idea," said Ferrag, adding he'd snag a second dose if it were offered to him on site.

The vehicle will move from park to parkand other outdoor public spaces in theCte-des-Neiges-NDG borough, the Parc-Extension neighbourhood, and municipalitiesincluding Westmount, Cote St. Luc, Hampstead, and Outremont in an effort to meet youths where they congregate.

"With the Vaccivan, we will be able to go where the young people aged from 18 to 35usually are," saidLucie Tremblay, director of vaccination for the CIUSSS. As of Tuesday, nearly 69 per cent of Montreal residents between 18 and 39 hadreceived a first dose of the vaccine.

Thissummer, the mobile clinic will mainlyoffer first doses to people without an appointment. Thescheduled routes will be announced as locations are confirmed.

Targeting youth, vaccine hesitancy

Tremblay says the Vaccivan will go wherevaccination rates are lowest and infection rates are highest. She says her team will monitor thedata on a daily basis to determine which regions these are.

"The younger people are very busy, they sometimes have a harder time to make the time to make an appointment," Tremblaysaid."So if we're going to meet them in the park, I'm convinced that we're going to be able to vaccinate a bunch of people."

Sharon Nelsonof the Jamaica Association ofMontreal says bringing the vaccine to people, in the comfort of their own neighbourhoods, creates a more welcoming environment and will help combat vaccine hesitancy among people aged20 to 50.

A mobile vaccination clinic called the 'Vaccivan' will travel to parks and other outdoor public spaces in an effort to meet youths where they congregate (CBC)

"There are pockets of the community that are somewhat hesitant," Nelson said. "Having a mobile van for vaccination right in the comfort or near where individuals are, Ithink it's a great idea."

Nelson says this initiativegives people who might otherwise be shy or have a fear of needles or be put off by clinical settingsthe opportunity to ask questions about the vaccine.

"People can go up and say 'tell me a little bit more about this,'" she said.

Doru Epure, another frequenter ofKent Park, says the initiative is beneficial for both youths and seniors, the latter being perhaps unfamiliarwith the technology involved in booking a vaccine on theClic Santsite.

"For younger people that sometimes might be lazy or don't want to get vaccinated, if [the Vaccivan] just comes up tothem, they won't be as reluctant to get vaccinated as if they had to schedule two appointments," Epure said.

The van was initially created to bring the Pfizer-BioNTech or Modernato people in the 18 to 35age group, but Tremblay says anyone eligible for a vaccinecan receive the shot.

"We want to go back to a normal life and vaccination is the only way that we're going to get there," she said.

Due toa delay in the next delivery of Pfizer vaccines, however, the Vaccivan will only offer Moderna for the time being and therefore only those 18 and older can receive a shot.

With files from Kwabena Oduro