British Columbia

Former B.C. anti-vaxxer says COVID-19 pandemic changed her mind about refusing immunizations

The province is experiencing a surge of new cases in people who are unvaccinated. One B.C. resident who was against vaccinations for years says educating herself about the deadly reality of the virus made her rethink her decades-long stance against immunizations.

The province is experiencing a surge of new cases in people who are unvaccinated

Maureen Orman was once against vaccinations in general but during the COVID-19 pandemic she changed her position on immunizations. (Jesse Brown)

British Columbia health officials are pleading with unvaccinated residents to get immunized against COVID-19 as hospital beds fill up with people who have not, and now, a B.C. resident who was against vaccination for years is sharing her story in an effort to get more shots in arms.

Maureen Orman, 69, is a Vancouver mother of three adult children whom she refused to vaccinate in the 1980s. Convinced that a holistic way of life offered more protection than being "polluted with vaccines," it was not until the COVID-19 pandemic struck that she says she started to rethink her position.

When people started asking her if she was planning to get a shot to protect herself against the novel coronavirus, Orman was unsure — so she started to do her research.

Unlike in the 80s, the internet and podcasts now provided a wealth of information and Orman was careful to focus on what medical experts were saying, as opposed to just anybody with a platform and a position.

"I started to change my mind ... and to see that what I had believed was actually based on false information and misleading information," she said, speaking to CBC's The Early Edition Thursday.

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Orman said looking back now, she is appalled she chose not to vaccinate her three daughters when they were young. She said they all have, or are planning to get, the COVID-19 vaccine.

"If I had it to do over again, I would vaccinate them," she said about her past choices concerning childhood vaccinations. Her daughters eventually decided on their own accord when they were older to get the shots they had missed as young kids.

In hindsight, Orman says she may have been persuaded by her family doctor at the time to give her girls those shots if he had pushed the issue harder.

"I really trusted this doctor and if he had, you know, tried to talk to me more about it, maybe I would have been swayed," she said.

Queenie Choo is the CEO of S.U.C.C.E.S.S., a social services organization helping new immigrants and a registered nurse who has been vaccinating people in the Lower Mainland for six months.

She said she has heard many stories on the front lines from people who were hesitant to vaccinate and changed their minds like Orman did.

Queenie Choo has been working as a front-line nurse vaccinating people during the pandemic. She says it is important that health care professionals listen and address people's concerns in order to reassure them immunization is safe.

Choo said what can really help people pivot their vaccine perspectives is hearing from a patient and well-informed health professional.

"It's important to explain everything to the individual and be able to be there to listen to their concerns," said Choo. "Knowledge is a powerful thing."

B.C. health officials have stressed the need to increase vaccination rates across the province as the fourth wave of the pandemic takes hold.

In the last five weeks, the province has seen a 1,000 per cent increase in cases and, on Wednesday, announced 536 new cases, the highest numbers in nearly three months.

On Wednesday, B.C. announced 536 new cases of COVID-19 and one more death, the highest number of new cases in nearly three months with the increase being overwhelmingly driven by unvaccinated people.

"Given what we have gone through together in this pandemic ... it is our expectation that people will be vaccinated," said Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry during a news conference Thursday.

Over 80 per cent of British Columbians have already received at least one dose of vaccine, but the province is still hoping to improve those numbers.

Henry has indicated that people who do not get vaccinated could also be subject to future restrictions that those who did won't face.

British Columbians aged 12 and over who have not yet been immunized can register in three ways:

People can also be immunized at walk-in clinics throughout the province.

With files from The Early Edition