Cape Breton Post

Canada’s lagging campaign ready to ramp up

- ALLISON MARTELL STEVE SCHERER

TORONTO/OTTAWA — Canada is expecting enough COVID-19 vaccine doses to double its supply by the end of next week to help ramp up a slow vaccinatio­n program as more contagious virus variants push the country toward a third wave of coronaviru­s infections.

Canada has lagged other rich countries in inoculatio­ns even though it ordered enough doses to vaccinate the population five times over late last year.

Those procuremen­t deals, however, guaranteed relatively few doses in the first quarter of 2021 with a sharp increase in the second quarter. Officials said on Friday that 6.8 per cent of the population had received at least one shot of a vaccine. That compares with 24.5 per cent of U.S. residents as of Monday.

Shipments of 4.7 million doses are expected this week and next — 2.4 million from Pfizer Inc., 846,000 from Moderna Inc. and a 1.5 million-dose loan of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine from the United States, according to federal forecasts and recent announceme­nts.

Future deliveries could be threatened if the European Union limits shipments from the Pfizer or Moderna operations in Europe that supply Canada. Canada has been told European exports will be allowed, a spokeswoma­n for Internatio­nal Trade Minister Mary Ng, said on Wednesday

Ng’s counterpar­ts in Europe “have assured her that these measures will not affect vaccine shipments to Canada,” Youmy Han said.

A Pfizer spokeswoma­n said export licenses had already been granted for deliveries this week and next, and that one has been requested for the week of April 5. Canada expects a million doses a week from Pfizer through the end of May.

Rising shipments and a policy of delaying second shots of the two-dose vaccines will enable the country to ramp up mass vaccinatio­n sites and some pharmacy distributi­on programs for older residents — two months after the United States.

“It certainly does provide a sense of relief,” said Isaac Bogoch, infectious diseases specialist at Toronto General Hospital and a member of Ontario’s vaccinatio­n distributi­on task force.

Canada is facing the possible beginning of a third wave of infections as the more transmissi­ble B.1.1.7 virus variant first discovered in the U.K. drives outbreaks in some hot spots.

The country received just under 4.8 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines between late December and March 17.

Canada is stretching the vaccine supply by offering second doses as long as four months after the first, which means Canadians will have to wait longer than U.S. residents to be fully vaccinated. In the United States, second shots of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine are given three weeks after the first, and the Moderna four weeks, mirroring dosing schedules in their clinical trials.

“We’re going to be in an extremely bizarre position in Canada where, for a period of many months, some people will have had zero doses of a vaccine, some people will have one dose, and some people will have two doses,” said Bogoch. “I think we need some very pragmatic advice from a federal centralize­d source about what’s acceptable.”

The National Advisory Council on Immunizati­on (NACI), which makes non-binding but influentia­l recommenda­tions on how provincial health systems should use vaccines, said modeling suggested delaying the second dose would reduce illness and deaths while the vaccine supply is limited.

“It makes a lot of sense to try to get as many people vaccinated as quickly as possible,” said Catherine Hankins, a McGill University epidemiolo­gist and co-chair of another federal advisory group, the COVID-19 Immunity Task Force.

“I’m convinced by looking at the data from other countries that show rapid rollouts to the most number of people has the biggest impact,” she said.

Canada has lagged other rich countries in inoculatio­ns even though it ordered enough doses to vaccinate the population five times over late last year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? FedEx employees unload a shipment from Europe of the Moderna vaccine at Toronto Pearson Airport on Wednesday.
REUTERS FedEx employees unload a shipment from Europe of the Moderna vaccine at Toronto Pearson Airport on Wednesday.

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