Vaccine creates ‘safe space’ in care homes, says worker who got Ottawa’s first dose
OTTAWA — At 8:05 a.m. on a cold, cloudless day, personal support worker Jo-Anne Miner became the first person of 1.4 million in the Ottawa-Gatineau area to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, hours before the federal government announced that hundreds of thousands more doses would arrive in Canada by the end of the year.
Frigid boxes holding some of the up to 417,000 vaccine doses set to arrive by the end of the month touched down in at least six provinces Tuesday, while several prepared to administer the medicine to health workers.
Miner is part of the legions of front-line staff and seniors-home residents slated for inoculation across the country this month amid a surging second wave.
“This will help create a safe space for me, my colleagues and the residents,” she said in a release from the Ottawa Hospital’s Civic campus, where 3,000 doses of the vaccine from Pfizer and its partner BioNTech sit in ultracold storage — enough for 1,500 people to get the two doses needed for maximum protection.


