‘Can’t we have lives too?’: High-risk Canadians feel forgotten as COVID rules lift
In early 2020, Bev Pausche felt like she may have a shot at a better life after two years of intensive treatment, including chemotherapy and a bone-marrow transplant, brought her lymphoma into remission.
Then the COVID-19 crisis hit. In the two years since, the 54-year-old says her life has become smaller and smaller to the point that she’s moving away from her community in West Vancouver to Nova Scotia, because it doesn’t make much of a difference where she lives if she doesn’t feel safe leaving her home.
Pausche, who founded the Immunocompromised Canada website, says early in the pandemic, it seemed like widespread recognition of the virus’s dangers galvanized public will to keep everyone safe.
But as most able-bodied people have reaped the full benefits of vaccination, Pausche says she feels like Canadians who face higher health risks from COVID-19 are being overlooked as others appear eagerto put the pandemic in the past.