As mentioned in my Thursday entry, yesterday was the day for my electroretinography (ERG) test at the General. It went smoothly but was all a bit surreal. At the entrance to the building, I donned my mask and got into a physically distanced line-up with two or three people ahead of me. Then I had to answer a list of questions to assure them I had no covidian symptoms and had not been outside the country in the past two weeks. Then I was directed to the elevators - maximum 4 people in each, and those are big elevators too, meant to accommodate stretchers and hospital beds. When I reached the Eye Institute on the 3rd floor, I was "processed" again, answering the same list of questions before depositing my health card in a sterile tray for the receptionist to take down my particulars. Then I was directed to a waiting room where half the seats were blocked off with yellow tape.

When my name was called, I was directed to a room with various optical machines of one kind and another, and given a series of different types of eye drops. After some basic measurements and tests where I mostly just had to stare at a light and avoid blinking, she brought me to another room where the ERG machine was (apparently the only one in Ottawa). Then she scraped me a bit (it felt like sandpaper) where all the contact points were and I was wired up with little stick-on things - on my forearm, behind my ears and on my eyelashes.

By that point, the pupils of my eyes were sufficiently dilated that she could proceed with the test, which involved staring at an X in the middle of a honeycomb-type pattern for 60 seconds at a time while she made a bunch of flashing lights go off. I think she did perhaps ten of these mini-sessions and she was very good about letting me know when there were 30 seconds left, or 15 or whatever. I can't say it really hurt, although it brought to mind some of the torture tests you see in the movies for getting secrets out of people: "We have ways of making you talk..."

Having arrived early for my 8:30 AM appointment, it went well, everyone was friendly but efficient and I was down in the lobby again shortly after 9 AM. But I must admit I didn't realize until yesterday evening and still today, that it had still taken its toll - I'm feeling quite sluggish and run-down.

As I looked through my e-mails, it struck me how creative folks are being in the whole re-opening process. Today, for example, I got a message about before- and after-hours shopping slots you can reserve at Indigo; also one about the various city museums that are now open a few days a week.

There was no Victorian Tea in the Arboretum this summer but the Billings Estate has a COVID-19 version of tea on the lawn, take-out picnic style. It's something we may consider.
On January 17, 2019, 3-year-old Charlotte Mantha died from complications of the flu, which had affected her liver and her brain. Her parents, Nancy Bouchard and Nicolas Mantha, were of course devastated, but determined to ensure that something positive would result from this tragic event. With the co-operation of the Gatineau Health Foundation, they established the Charlotte Mantha Endowment Fund, geared to improving the breadth and quality of paediatric care for Outaouais children, both now and for generations still to come. You can find the details of this fund here:

http://www.fondationsantegatineau.ca/where-do-your-donations-go/charlotte-mantha-endowment-funds/

The fund also has a Facebook page here:

https://www.facebook.com/FondsdedotationCharlotteMantha/

One of the most urgent funding priorities is the establishment of a paediatric hospital for west Quebec, analogous to the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) in Ottawa. CHEO is already a world-class hospital, situated in a sprawling hospital complex on Smyth Road, right in the Elmvale Acres neighbourhood where I grew up, went to school, made friends and still have many family and friendly ties. Who hasn't heard of Ronald McDonald House? Or the Teddy Bears' Picnic?

Outaouais children who are seriously ill are presently treated at CHEO. But that's one more river to cross and for now, one more checkpoint to cross as well! The following article that appeared in Le Droit in October outlines some of the issues:

https://www.ledroit.com/actualites/le-fonds-charlotte-mantha-est-cree-f9817a8cc97ac35577d8295f862ac4ad

This is a cause that is very dear to my heart. In August of 2012, I remember standing at a window of a room on the maternity floor of the Hull Hospital, shortly after my second grandchild was born. Looking out, I saw something rather rare: a double rainbow.

Ça va aller. Maybe not for Charlotte, but for countless Outaouais children out there, as well as those yet to be born.
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