Medicine Hat News

Most Canadians confident federal vaccine rollout is back on track: poll

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

A majority of Canadians believe Ottawa will follow through on its plan to provide enough COVID-19 vaccine doses for everyone who wants a shot by the fall, a new poll suggests.

Fifty-six per cent of respondent­s are confident the federal government can buy enough vaccine to ensure inoculatio­n for those who seek it by September, according to an online survey by Leger and the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies.

Canadians on both coasts and in Quebec were optimistic about their provinces’ rollout plans as well as that of the feds. Respondent­s in Ontario and the Prairies were more skeptical, with just one in three Albertans expressing faith in their government’s delivery scheme.

The poll also found that most residents are in no rush to lift anti-pandemic lockdowns, with two-thirds saying restrictio­ns should remain at least until half the population is immunized.

Leger executive vicepresid­ent Christian Bourque says the ramp-up in vaccine shipments last week likely brightened Canadians’ views of federal distributi­on efforts. Only two weeks ago, 69 per cent of respondent­s blamed Ottawa rather than provincial government­s for delays in vaccine delivery, Leger found.

“There’s been a bit of a change over the past couple of weeks,” Bourque said in an interview.

“The news we got about the doses coming in from Pfizer and the new doses acquired from (Moderna) plus the fact that we approved AstraZenec­a ... all of these elements together have actually had some positive influence on Canadians’ confidence that we will get vaccinated before the deadline that the federal government set for itself.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has repeatedly promised to secure enough doses to immunize all willing Canadians by the end of September.

The Public Health Agency of Canada is currently expecting delivery of about 445,000 doses of various vaccines this week, following last week’s record high of 640,000 doses in a seven-day period.

It’s unclear when the first doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine — approved by the publicheal­th agency on Friday — will arrive in the country, but a senior government official told The Canadian Press on background the first doses could land as early as mid-week, boosting the total.

Now, attention turns to the provinces as shipments start to pour in and provincial administra­tion is put to the test.

Despite the challenges of ongoing public health restrictio­ns, the more prudent strain of Canada’s national character is visible behind the responses to the Leger survey, Bourque suggested.

“The majority of Canadians are extremely careful about what should happen and when, depending on the pace at which we vaccinate,” he said, referring to lockdown lifts.

“Basically, there’s no rush.”

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