patient calling was a 90-year-old Holocaust survivor.“He’s tired of this and he’s worried. And he said, ‘don’t you know that I have a high risk of dying if I get COVID?’ And I said, ‘absolutely, you’re preaching to the choir here.’” When is it my turn?
A coast-to-coast look at COVID-19 vaccine rollout However, Sinha’s patient doesn’t live in long-term care – which means he isn’t first in line to get the coronavirus vaccine in Ontario, despite the fact that he’s in a high-risk group.This, Sinha said, is a problem among many older adults: while vaccination rollouts in the province have prioritized older Canadians living in long-term care, seniors who are still living in the community have to wait until Phase 2 to get their jabs.That phase.