The Southwest Booster

Challenges slow Saskatchew­an COVID-19 vaccine roll out

- SCOTT ANDERSON SOUTHWEST BOOSTER

Challenges of delivery to the north and a decreased vaccine supply from what was expected are two of the factors Saskatchew­an is pointing to as reason for a slow roll out of their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program.

During a COVID-19 update by the provincial government on January 6, Saskatchew­an Health Minister Paul Merriman said the logistics to delivering the vaccine to the priority area of Saskatchew­an’s north has provided some challenges.

“Obviously northern

Saskatchew­an, there is logistical challenges up there. This isn’t where we can do 5,000 or a 1,000 people over a short amount of time. We have travelling that they have to do. We have our clinics up there and ready to go. So it is going to go slower in the north,” Merriman said last Wednesday.

Saskatchew­an received its first batch of the Moderna vaccine this past week, and on January 5 they began administra­ting the vaccines in northern Saskatchew­an to priority targeted healthcare workers and long term care residents. Additional­ly, 3,900 doses of the Pfizer vaccine arrived this past Wednesday at Prince Albert’s Victoria Hospital.

“The first run of anything is going to be the one where we work out all of the turns and bumps in the road that we have with anything that we’re doing.”

Merriman further defended the vaccine rollout out totals, noting that overall numbers have been impacted by the hold back for Saskatchew­an’s initial vaccine pilot project.

Merriman noted that both the Public Health Agency of Canada and the manufactur­er had required the province to hold back the second dose of the Pfizer vaccines in the pilot project because of an uncertaint­y of the delivery of the vaccine. However, Saskatchew­an will no longer be holding back vaccine doses for second shots because of a more certain supply of vaccine batches.

However, Merriman is concerned that Saskatchew­an is not receiving the 11,000 weekly doses of the Pfizer vaccine which the federal government pledged back in December.

“That’s disappoint­ing because that’s what we geared up for and that’s what we were ready for,” Merriman said.

“We are limited by the number of doses that we have received. We could get absolutely more vaccinatio­ns done more quickly, if and when the federal government provides us with more doses.”

Saskatchew­an is expecting to receive 6,800 Pfizer doses weekly during the remainder of January, with another 5,300 doses of the Moderna vaccine arriving before the end of January.

“That’s a total of 30,000 doses expected in January. This is just simply not near enough, and it is significan­tly less they promised us just last month.”

The lower vaccine amounts are occurring while Saskatchew­an is experienci­ng another spike in new COVID cases. Saskatchew­an’s single day new cases have spiked from 153 daily new cases (12.6 per 100,000 population) on December 30, the lowest since mid November, up to 279 new daily cases (23.1 per 100,000 population) on January 97.

Saskatchew­an has also experinece­d a jump in the seven-day average of daily new cases, increasing to 289 (23.9 new cases per 100,000 population) as of this past Saturday.

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