4th wave of COVID-19 hitting formerly unhoused people hard in provincial capital, says non-profit
CBC
When COVID-19 struck British Columbia in the spring of 2020, concerns about it tearing through the homeless population motivated the province to purchase hotels and move unsheltered people indoors.
Now, a Victoria non-profit society providing services in these congregate settings says the delta variant has moved indoors too — making life difficult for people living in these places and the people trying to help them.
The Victoria Cool Aid Society provides medical and food support for people living in temporary supportive housing. Mary Chudley, director of health and support services, says while the vaccine does offer a layer of support for staff and clients that people did not have in 2020, overcoming vaccine hesitancy has been a challenge.
"We're working really closely with public health these days to do outreach," said Chudley, speaking Wednesday on CBC's On The Island.
She said a public health nurse has been going to visit people with an outreach worker from the society to try to have a familiar face available to field questions and encourage vaccinations.
For privacy reasons, Chudley did not say how many people receiving society supports are currently infected, but did say cases have risen over the last couple weeks, that there are clusters among this demographic and that the cases are spread out among more than one location.
"We are continuing to provide health care that folks need on a daily basis and access to services and we're also providing increased care to this cluster of cases of COVID-positive individuals," she said,.