Special arrangements should be put in place for differently-abled individuals to get the COVID-19 Vaccine.
This call was made by Dr Glenn Ramadharsingh, the head of the Dr Glenn’s Foundation for Special Children when he delivered hampers to families of needy children on Saturday afternoon at Freeport and Penal.
Ramadharsingh said, “I think more needs to be done for the differently-abled community during the pandemic. We are shut-in and they are doubly shut-in because they have no avenues to recreate, they can’t go anywhere, they end up being depressed.”
The former Minister added, “I call upon the government and the Minister of Health to go with a mobile service to the differently-abled community to those who are doctor-approved and give them the vaccine in their home. I don’t want to think that they would have to line up. Now its vaccine-mania in Trinidad and Tobago, everybody wants to get the vaccine, they could be crushed, there is not enough parking space for them and their families have to be waiting there and some of them are very frail and fragile. Why cant we have a service that takes the vaccine to them that will show some empathy, some care, some love.”
Ramadharsingh said some low and middle-income people may have to break regulations and find work in order to pay bank loans. Ramadharsingh said despite pleas from the Prime Minister to defer loan payments, it was his information that some banks are not doing so. He said banks are giving deferrals on a case by case basis.
He said in 2020 banks offered to defer all mortgage payments without any request from customers.
Ramadharsingh said, “I saw the Central Bank send out a release and the banks are saying that it’s a case by case basis, that means you can be refused and you are in fear of losing your property. That makes you go and break the COVID regulations and go and seek work.”
He has called on the Prime Minister and Minister of Finance to look into this matter.
In the meantime, Ramadharsingh said his foundation, which was founded in 2015, will continue to assist special-needs children and their families, particularly during the lockdown.