Ontario could prevent hundreds of deaths if all LTC residents vaccinated by month's end: report - Action News
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Ontario could prevent hundreds of deaths if all LTC residents vaccinated by month's end: report

New projections by the province's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table suggest ifOntario accelerated its immunization rollout so all of its long-term care home residents were immunized by the end of January, as many as 580 deaths could be avoided by the end of March.

Decision not to immunize all LTC residents first 'a breathtaking failure,' study author says

According to a report released by the province's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, administering the first dose of the vaccine to all LTC residents by Jan. 31 could save as many as 580 lives under a best-case scenario. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

New projections by the province's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table suggest ifOntario were to accelerateits immunization rolloutandvaccinate alllong-term care home residents by the end of January, as many as 580livescould be saved.

The report, conducted by Science Table and released on Thursday, outlines the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths that could beaverted if the government gets needles into the arms of all residents by various target dates.

According to the report, administering the first dose of the vaccine to all long-term care patients by the end of January would prevent a projected 600 COVID-19 cases by March. 31, in comparison to the province's current plan to vaccinate all LTC residents by Feb. 15.

Dr. Nathan Stall, a geriatrician at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital and one of the authors of the report,is critical of theprovince for failing to immunize every long-term care home residentin Ontario by now.

"I consider this honestly to be a breathtaking failure," said Stall.

"We're approaching five weeks. We have vaccinated about 55,000long-term care workers, 15,000retirement home workers and about 15,000retirement home residents," he said.

"But the number one priority all along ought to have been vaccinating long-term care residents."

According to the report, had the province provided the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to all Ontario LTC residents by Jan. 21, around 530 deaths would be prevented, with the worst-case scenario at 120 deaths and the best case at 900.

If itprovided the first dose to all residents by Jan. 31, around 340 deaths linked to COVID-19 would have been avoidable with the worst case at 100 and the best case at 580.

Underthe province's current plan, if it administers the first dose to allresidents by Feb. 15, the number of deaths prevented isprojected to be 225, with the worst case at 100 and best at 340.

Without vaccination, the report projectedatotal of 12,200 COVID-19 cases among LTC residentsbetween Jan.13, and March 31.

Critics of the Ford government's approachhave argued the first 72,000 of the 240,000 vaccine doses delivered thus far should have solely gone into the arms of LTC residents as quickly as possible, as they havethe highest likelihood of mortality in comparison to others.

As of Thursday, the province's totalCOVID-19 death toll has reached3,256residents and 10 staff. There are currently 251 homes dealing with COVID-19 outbreaks.

Dr. Nathan Stall, a geriatrician at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital, calles the Ford government approach to long-term care immunizations a 'breathtaking failure.' (CBC)

Stall told CBC News that the approach Ontario has taken in vaccine distributionwill likely cost more lives in the long run, given the province's closures during December and its slow start.

The province began administering COVID-19 vaccines on Dec.14, andidentified early onits approximately 70,000 LTC home residents as a priority group to receive the initial doses.

"If vaccine supply is limited, the early provision of first doses of a COVID-19 vaccine to LTC home residents is likely to be more beneficial than the on-schedule provision of second doses to health-care workers outside of LTC homes," the report reads.

The province had enough doses to vaccinate all LTC residents, Stall said, but instead health-care workers outside of LTC homesgot their shots before some residents.Now that there is a shortage ofvaccines,residents are left vulnerable, he said.

"They actually put the needles in the wrong arms," Stall said.

"They put the needles in the arms of people who are much less likely to die and now they've hit the situation where they have an unexpected supply shortage for the next couple of weeks.

"The fact that we are now delaying until Feb.15and possibly later, as indicated during yesterday's press conference, to vaccinate the remaining long term care residents it just defies logic," Stall added.

A stop sign outside a long-term care home in Barrie, Ont.
As of Thursday, 251 long-term care homes in Ontario are grappling with outbreaks. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Jennifer Penney's 81-year-old mother died ofCOVID-19 on Boxing Day, but Penney says had her mother received the shot before that date she could've lived.

"[My] motherwasn't in the best of healthbut I don't believe she would have passed if she hadn't contracted COVID-19. She would have been here longer," Penney said.

Penney caredfor her mother for several years before she was placed in a long-term care home in 2019, she said.

"I look back and think if I'd just been able to for a couple more months hold back ...she would still be here."

The provincial government said in a statement to CBC Toronto Thursday that recent changes to vaccine transporting conditions has allowed them to immunizemore long-term care residentsthan itinitially planned.

Jennifer Penney's 81-year-old mother, Yvette Brauch, died of COVID-19 on Boxing Day. (Submitted by: Jennifer Penney)

"Recently, the manufacturer has advised that the Pfizer vaccine can be transported under specific conditions. After a successful pilot in the Ottawa area, the government has expanded the transport of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to other long-term care homes across the province for the immunization of staff, residents and essential caregivers," a spokesperson for the Ministry of Health said.

"The province continues to determine the impact the delay in shipments from the federal government will have on the province's vaccine rollout," the statement reads.

"We continue to vaccinate our most vulnerable and remain committed to prioritizing long-term care and high-risk retirement home residents based on availability of supply provided by the federal government."

Ontario will have "baseline capacity to vaccinate nearly 40,000 people a day in the coming weeks, and we have the ability to triple or quadruple this capacity with notice," the spokespersonsaid.

With files from Angelina King, David Common and Michelle Song