Medicine Hat News

PM hopes to see vaccines roll out in early 2021

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday he hopes to see COVID-19 vaccines roll out in Canada early next year, but warned that won’t bring an immediate resolution to the pandemic currently seeing a resurgence in several provinces.

The prime minister said news from Pfizer that one of its vaccine candidates appears very effective in clinical trials is “very encouragin­g” but won’t help anyone who catches the virus in the meantime.

Speaking in Ottawa, Trudeau said other vaccine candidates have also appeared to progress well, and Canada has secured access to several, given the uncertaint­y regarding which will be ready first, which will be more effective with certain population­s, and other variables.

When a vaccine is safe to distribute, the government will begin dispensing it to high-priority groups first, he said.

“We hope to see vaccines landing in the early next year but between now and then it’s really, really important that we double down on our efforts,” Trudeau said.

“We need to make sure we are controllin­g the spread of COVID-19 in the coming months so that when vaccines get here we will be able to act quickly to protect all Canadians.”

His comments came after a weekend that saw the two provinces hardest hit by the pandemic report recordbrea­king daily case counts.

Quebec and Ontario reported 1,397 and 1,328 new cases respective­ly on Sunday, followed by 1,169 and 1,242 on Monday.

Health officials in Quebec said Monday that while the situation has improved in some areas such as Quebec City and Montreal, it is worsening in others — including the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean area, which currently has more than double the provincial rate of cases per 100,000 people.

Public health authoritie­s reported 94 new cases in the region on Monday, for a total of 312 active cases per 100,000 people.

The region was placed under Quebec’s highest COVID-19 alert level on Nov. 2, and the province’s health minister said it will take some time before any effects from the new restrictio­ns are seen.

In Ontario, Premier Doug Ford was asked Monday whether the ballooning cases in the province pushed him to reconsider its new colour-coded system for pandemic measures, which loosened public health restrictio­ns in all regions but Toronto when it took effect Saturday.

The tiered system places health units in colour-coded categories based on their caseload and transmissi­on levels, and has drawn criticism for allowing activities such as indoor dining in restaurant­s in all alert levels short of a lockdown.

In Peel Region, the only area currently in the red category, local health officials imposed additional measures over the weekend in order to reduce the risk of transmissi­on.

But Ford defended the system Monday, saying it was built to give each region the flexibilit­y to enact further rules, as Peel did. “That’s the reason we have the framework,” he said.

Toronto, meanwhile, is remaining under a previous, more stringent system until the end of the week, at the request of local officials.

The city accounted for 483 of Ontario’s new cases on Monday.

Mayor John Tory said the city would likely follow in Peel Region’s footsteps and impose “an enhanced suite of measures” to stem the spread of the virus, with more details to come Tuesday.

The city’s top doctor, Dr. Eileen de Villa, said the COVID-19 numbers seen over the last few days were among the “most concerning” she’s seen since the start of the pandemic.

Further west, Manitoba reported 365 new COVID-19 cases Monday as it continued to lead the country in per-capita active cases.

Chief public health officer Dr. Brent Roussin said the province is at a critical point in time, pointing to increased strain on the health system.

Roussin said he has talked with Premier Brian Pallister about imposing further restrictio­ns.

Meanwhile, Trudeau said the federal government is already working on the logistics of distributi­ng a COVID-19 vaccine, particular­ly since the Pfizer candidate needs to be stored at around -75C to remain stable.

Canada has bought the rights to 20 million doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, if it proves effective and Health Canada approves it for use here, and Trudeau said the government would purchase more if the initial round goes well.

The company said in a news release that early results from a large-scale trial show its vaccine is 90 per cent effective at combating the virus.

 ??  ?? Justin Trudeau
Justin Trudeau

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada