Accueil   |   Nous joindre   |   Imprimer blank

grippeA(h1n1)

Francais

Let’s Make Solidarity Contagious!

Influenza A (H1N1) will probably disrupt our daily lives.
We might need one another.
Why not prepare for it?

 

Press Release, nov 10, 09

 

The daily lives of some people might be disrupted by the Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic. Your neighbours could become indispensable allies because, if relatives and friends do not live close by, the local community service centers (CLSC) and community organizations will not necessarily be able to meet all the needs tied to daily life.

 

During the ice storm (1997), spontaneous solidarity among neighbours was implemented quickly. Why not create it beforehand so that it will be more efficient?


What You Can Do

Offer to help your neighbours

  • Contact your neighbours right away to tell them that you are willing to help them, should they need it. Show concern especially for vulnerable people (elderly, alone, handicapped, and single-parent families);

Develop a support network among neighbours

  • discuss with them the measures of assistance that you could take.
  • identify together the people that could be vulnerable: a person living alone, a person unable to be away from work, a handicapped person, etc.
  • identify together everyone’s availability and the type of assistance that available people are willing to offer.

Do not hesitate to ask your neighbours for help

  • It is normal to need help when facing certain situations. Talk to your neighbours right away to ask them for their support, should you need it. This is not about pride or weakness; it is about taking measures to keep you healthy and safe.


Moreover…

  • Check if there are organizations within your neighbourhood or town that can help neighbours in need: volunteer services for transportation, emergency food services, etc.
  • See if the Mes voisins et la pandémie (My neighbours and the pandemic) kit can be useful. It includes tools to encourage and facilitate contacts among neighbours in the event of the Influenza A (H1N1).


Ways to Help Each Other among Neighbours

  • Pick up the prescription of the elderly couple who lives on the second floor.
  • Cook for the single-parent family next door.
  • Run errands for the neighbour across the street who lives alone;.
  • Share babysitting responsibilities with neighbours you know.
  • Reassure the isolated person who is worried about the pandemic.

There are other ways of helping. By talking with your neighbours, you will see what type of support could be most helpful.


Helping Each Other without Getting Infected

Preventive measures must be taken if you expect coming into contact with a sick person, but they do not prohibit people from showing solidarity, quite on the contrary.


Reminder of the basic instructions to follow

  • Get vaccinated.
  • Wash our hands often.
  • Wash your hands before eating or handling food and after using a tissue to cough, sneeze or blow your nose.
  • Cough or sneeze in a tissue or into the crook of your arm.
  • Clean your environment (counters, sinks, and other surfaces often touched by hands).
  • If you are sick and interact with other people, wear a mask or a scarf (that you will wash after use).

When coming into contact with people who are sick or could be contagious

  • Remind them of the basic instructions to follow (aforementioned).
  • Keep a safe distance from sick people (one to two meters).
  • Avoid touching personal objects and utensils used by sick people.
  • In the presence of a sick person, wear a mask or a scarf (that you will wash after use).
  • If you are someone who runs the risk of having complications, avoid direct contact with a sick neighbour and find someone else to help him or her.


For more information

Refer to the Preventive Measures section of the Pandémie Québec website to have access to the complete list of instructions to follow to protect yourself and avoid spreading the virus


Advantages to Caring about Your Neighbours in the Face of Influenza A (H1N1)

  • Mutual aid among neighbours will facilitate your daily lives and allow you to get through the pandemic more calmly.
  • You will feel useful and generous.
  • By strengthening the bond with your neighbours, you will improve your life in the neighbourhood and plan for the future given the fact that other situations could arise and your neighbours’ support could be useful.

“Mes voisins et la pandémie” Kit (My Neighbours and the Pandemic)

Here are a few tools to encourage and facilitate contacts among neighbours in the event of Influenza A (H1N1). To download or print according to your needs.

Poster Directory Board
To put up in a common room,
the lobby in your building or on
the door of your home for all to
see and this, to encourage mutual
aid among neighbours.
The neighbours’ directory with
everyone’s address and phone
number to stay in contact without
coming into contact.
To offer a service or express a need.
To put up in a common room or the
lobby in your building for all to see.

 

affiche Grippe
Use it to devise homemade tools.

 

To Get Information about the Flu

  • Visit the Pandémie Québec website.
  • For questions about your health, a relative’s or a neighbour’s, call the Info-Santé health hotline 8-1-1.
  • For any other question related to the outbreak of Influenza A (H1N1) and Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic vaccination centers, call Services Québec:


Everyday: 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Québec area: 418 644-4545
Montréal area: 514 644-4545
Elsewhere in Québec: 1 877 644-4545 (toll free)
Teletypewriter (TTY) for people with a hearing or speech impairments: 1 800 361-9596 (toll free)

This campaign was initiated by the Réseau québécois de Villes et Villages en santé (Québec Network of Healthy Communities), a non-profit-making organization uniting more than 180 towns that care about the health of their citizens and the development of healthy and sustainable environments.

The network also initiated the Fête des Voisins (Neighbours’ Day), a provincial event that has become increasingly popular for almost five years and that aims at developing mutual aid and solidarity among neighbours.

This campaign drew its inspiration from the campaign that was conducted in France by the Association Voisins Solidaire (Neighbours’ Solidarity Association).