Edmonton Journal

Canada to donate 17.7M doses to global pool

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA • The federal government is donating 17.7 million doses of the Oxford-astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine, and is asking Canadians to give their own money to help other countries get needles into arms.

Procuremen­t Minister Anita Anand says after talking to provinces, it was determined these COVID-19 doses to be excess supply, as demand for this vaccine had been met.

She says the Astrazenec­a doses to be donated were supposed to flow into Canada through an advanced purchase agreement and be produced in the United States.

Anand says the shots will be made available to lower-income countries through the global vaccine-sharing alliance COVAX. The timing is still being worked out.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on says MRNA vaccines, such as the ones by Moderna and Pfizer-biontech, are preferred over the viral-vector vaccine by Astrazenec­a, even for people who received Astrazenec­a as a first dose.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was among the Canadians who got Astrazenec­a for his first dose and Moderna for his second.

While at the G7 last month, Trudeau pledged Canada would give back 13 million doses it was set to receive through a contract with COVAX, on top of millions of dollars already set aside for the global vaccine effort.

Canada is on track to receive 68 million doses by the end of July, which would be enough to inoculate most Canadians.

At Monday's announceme­nt, Anand says 44 million doses of Moderna and 51 million shots from Pfizer-biontech are expected to have arrived in the country by the end of September.

With a population of nearly 38 million people, Canada would need about 76 million shots of two-dose vaccines to make sure everyone is fully vaccinated.

Asked Monday about why the federal government hasn't marked any of its Moderna or Pfizer deliveries for donation given its volume of supply, Anand said these shots are still in high demand in Canada and things could stay that way.

“We are still watching the science evolve in this area in terms of the potential need for an additional third shot or boosters, and so we are making sure that we have the supply on hand of these vaccines to be able to serve the needs of Canadians in the short and the long term,” she said.

It's unclear when, or whether, Canadians will need to get a third dose of vaccine.

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Anita Anand

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