Medicine Hat News

Alberta ramps up COVID vaccinatio­ns, paramedics on priority list for shots

- DEAN BENNETT

Premier Jason Kenney says the province is ramping up and expanding COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns to inoculate paramedics and other emergency service workers.

Kenney said Monday that close to 47,000 doses have been administer­ed to front-line health and ICU workers, including doctors and nurses, and to residents in long-term care homes and supportive living facilities.

Alberta has used about threequart­ers of the stock made available from the federal government and is urging the feds to find and ship more.

At its current rate of vaccinatin­g about 3,800 people a day, Kenney said the province will run out of its shipment sometime next week.

“We have to have an adequate and ongoing supply of vaccine doses arriving through the federal government. This is absolutely critical,” Kenney told reporters at a virtual news conference.

“We can only work with what we’ve got.”

The premier said the goal is to vaccinate about 200,000

Albertans a week by the end of March.

He added that by the end of March, officials expect to receive 677,000 doses of the PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna vaccines from Ottawa.

If other vaccines are approved by Health Canada and their manufactur­ers don’t sign distributi­on deals with the federal government, Kenney said he may negotiate to see if Alberta can get those shipments directly.

“There are other platforms out there,” he said.

“I’ve asked our legal folks to look at (the possibilit­y) if the federal government is not going to procure other vaccines that go to market, whether provincial government­s can do so on their own.”

Alberta has 4.4 million people. Kenney said the goal is to continue to vaccinate throughout the year, with most people getting shots by the fall, but vaccinatio­n is not mandatory.

The province has recently had falling COVID-19 case rates but stubbornly high levels of hospitaliz­ation.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, announced 639 new cases Monday, almost a month after the province recorded its highest daily number of 1,887 infections.

There were 811 people in hospital, 130 of them in ICU. There have been 1,307 deaths.

Skyrocketi­ng pre-Christmas numbers prompted Kenney to reinstate lockdown measures on the economy that will stay in place until at least Jan. 21.

Those rules include a ban on all indoor and outdoor gatherings, beyond those already living under the same roof.

Bars and restaurant­s are limited to takeout or pickup only. Retail stores can have only 15 per cent customer capacity. Entertainm­ent venues like casinos, museums and theatres are closed. Personal services including hair salons and barber shops also remain shuttered.

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