Health-care workers, seniors overcome with 'wave of emotions' as vaccine campaign begins in Laval - Action News
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Montreal

Health-care workers, seniors overcome with 'wave of emotions' as vaccine campaign begins in Laval

Gisle Fortaich, 86, was among those to receive the vaccine in Laval Thursday. Fortaich told reporters she wanted to be sure to get the vaccine after a harrowing experience at the hospital with COVID-19 some months ago.

Hundreds around Montreal received 1st COVID-19 vaccine dose Thursday

Seniors in Laval were among the first in Quebec's general population to receive a first shot of the COVID-19 vaccines Thursday. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Months of preparation, countless hours of work and meetings it all hit Isabelle Parent in the shower Thursday morning, as she was getting ready to open the mass vaccination centre she oversees in Laval.

"I got like a wave of emotions and I started crying," Parenttold reporters at the centre, adding she was getting goose bumps talking about it.

"It just feels like the beginning of a new daythat that will eventually allow us to see our families."

Thursday was the first day members of the general population in Quebec could receive their firstof two shots of the vaccines against COVID-19.

The Quebec government opened its online appointment portal quebec.ca/covidvaccine and opened its phone lines (at 1-877-644-4545) yesterday, and some of the regional health boards around Montreal began inoculating earlier than the planned March 1 date.

Quebecers born in 1936 or before are eligible to make appointments for now, as well as those born in 1951 or earlier who are their caregivers. Other segments of the population are expected to soon follow, according to the province's priority list.

Parent says Thursday's appointments were booked within an hour. Three hundred and twenty-two to start with, then 622 each for the two following days. As of Monday, she says the centre will be vaccinating at a cadence of between 800 and 1,000 people per day.

Gisle Fortaich, 86, was among those to receive the vaccine in Laval Thursday. Fortaichtold reporters she wanted to be sure to get the vaccine after a harrowing experience at the hospital with COVID-19 some months ago.

"It wasn't easy to stay at the hospital that long," Fortaichsaid, without specifying how long it took to recover or whether she knew how she caught the virus. "But I was lucky to survive at my age."

"What I went through, I'm telling myself it's over now and I'm looking to the future."

Watch: the first person to get the vaccine at Laval's vaccination centre

Getting COVID vaccine is 'very important' 86-year-old says

4 years ago
Duration 0:53
Gisle Fortaich, 86, said she was looking forward to getting vaccinated after being hospitalized with COVID-19 a few months ago.

Fortaichjoked with the workers as they helped put on her mask and wheeled her to the post-vaccine waiting area.

When someone asked if it hurt, she shook her head.

"Not at all. In fact, it felt good. I was so excited."

Health Minister Christian Dubheld a news conference Thursday to provide an update on the vaccination process.

He acknowledged there were some glitches with the appointment-making process, including some postal codes not working online at first and the 1-800 number not working in some areas.But he said those issueswere for the most part fixed.

People wait outside the Laval vaccination centre at 640 Le Corbusier Boulevard West on the first day the vaccines were made available to Quebecers born in 1936 or before. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Dubalso said that with larger-than-expected deliveries slated for the coming weeks, the province should be able to vaccinate 700,000 people in the month of March. That includes providing second doses for those who have been vaccinated between December and February, beginning the week of March 15.

He also urged Quebecers to exercise caution during next week's March break, and to observe public health measures.

"We are one month away from having a large number of people vaccinated ... so let's be prudent," he said.

With files from Radio-Canada and Sean Gordon