Vancouver Sun

Province to open vaccine registry in March

- CAMILLE BAINS

B.C.'S oldest residents will be able to pre-register for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns starting in March after the most vulnerable groups have been immunized, under a plan announced Friday.

Premier John Horgan said “unpreceden­ted hardship” and grief have continued a year after the first case of COVID-19 was diagnosed in Canada, though the rollout of a vaccine strategy means more than 110,000 people have been vaccinated in B.C. so far.

“We have a long, long way to go,” he said, adding public health guidelines including wearing a mask and physical distancing must be followed even as the mass vaccine campaign begins in April.

B.C. reported 508 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday and nine more deaths, pushing the death toll in the province to 1,128. There were 4,479 active infections, including 315 people in hospital.

The province is aiming to immunize 4.3 million residents aged 18 and over by the end of October. People who pre-register for the plan will get a reminder to book appointmen­ts when eligible, but Dr. Bonnie Henry, the provincial health officer, said timelines for vaccinatio­n will depend on available doses of the Pfizer-biontech and Moderna vaccines, as others are expected to be approved by the federal government.

Residents of long-term care homes, health care workers who look after them, as well as essential visitors are among those who are currently being vaccinated. They will be followed in February and March by more residents of Indigenous communitie­s, those who are 80 and over and Indigenous seniors over 65.

Seniors aged 75 to 79 are expected to be vaccinated starting in April as part of the pre-registrati­on strategy that will then move on to younger people in five-year age groupings.

Those in the 70-to-74 age group will follow, along with people with severe health conditions that put them at high risk for infection. Henry said vulnerable population­s include people who have had an organ transplant, patients with specific cancers and respirator­y conditions including severe asthma, and pregnant women with significan­t heart disease.

Second doses will be administer­ed about 35 days later as part of the plan, which will be rolled out in 172 communitie­s across the province.

Henry said vaccines will be given in facilities including school gyms, arenas and mobile clinics, as well as home visits for those who are unable to attend a clinic, and B.C. will call on volunteers for support. Everyone who is vaccinated will get a record of their immunizati­on and a reminder to get their second dose.

While people with chronic illnesses have called for early vaccinatio­n, Henry said scientific evidence from around the world supports the province's age-based approach because older population­s are at much higher risk of infection and death from COVID -19.

“We know that adults older than 60 have at least a five times increased risk of hospitaliz­ation and death compared with those less than 45 years of age and, in particular, people over 80 have double the mortality risk of even those in the 60 to 65-year age group.”

The message is the same for essential workers, such as grocery-store employees, police and correction­al officers, Henry said, adding the approval of more vaccines may mean the province's plan could be revised to vaccinate those groups between April and June.

Youth who are 17 and under will not be vaccinated because the current vaccines have not been approved for them, she said, adding everyone who is eligible should get immunized in order to create so-called community or herd immunity to protect as many people as possible from getting infected.

Health officials are seeking guidance from the National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on about whether people who have received one of the vaccines could get a different one for their second dose in case of a shortage, but that would happen only as a last resort as there is no data to support such a plan, Henry said.

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