The Standard (St. Catharines)

Vaccine rollout likely to differ across Ontario

Solicitor general says the province is ‘empowering’ local health units to draw up their own specific plans

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

Ontario’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout could look different in each of its 34 public health units as the province receives more doses in the coming weeks, the government said Monday.

Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said Ontario is “empowering” local health units to draw up their own specific plans to distribute the vaccine, and all have been submitted to the government for approval.

Vaccines will be distribute­d to health units based on population, Jones said, and while they must follow the province’s plan to vaccinate priority population­s first, they can also determine the best way to serve the needs of their communitie­s.

“We are ensuring through our vaccine distributi­on that the people most close to their communitie­s — the public health units — are making the decisions on what is the fastest and easiest and most equitable way to ensure that people get the vaccines they need,” Jones said.

Ontario expects to receive a more steady supply of COVID-19 vaccines in the coming weeks as delivery issues that previously slowed the rollout have been resolved.

The province has so far been focused on vaccinatin­g the highest-priority groups, which include residents and staff in long-term-care homes. Residents 80 and older, Indigenous adults and seniors in congregate care have been identified as the next in line for the shot.

The province has said it’s creating an online booking system to help expand its vaccine rollout in the coming weeks.

Ontario’s health minister said Monday the rollout will need to look different in different communitie­s.

“The rollout in Toronto will be very different from the rollout in North Bay, Thunder Bay and so on,” Christine Elliott said. “It’s up to the local medical officers of health to fashion a plan, whether it’s going to be mass vaccinatio­n clinics, whether it’s going to be through pharmacies, whether it’s going to be through physicians offices.”

Opposition leader Andrea Horwath said the province needs to take a more active approach to the local rollouts and ensure all health units have the necessary resources required to speed up distributi­on.

“It’s worrisome that the government looks like they’re planning to lay any problems at the feet of public health units, which is unfair,” she said.

The second phase of Ontario’s distributi­on plan, slated for April, is to target the 80 and older group, and then residents aged 65 to 75 through primary care clinics and pharmacies.

A total of 569,455 vaccine doses have been administer­ed in Ontario so far. The province reported 1,058 new cases of COVID-19 and 11 more deaths linked to the virus Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada