Medicine Hat News

Ottawa’s vaccine point man aims for more predictabi­lity

- LAUREN KRUGEL

The point man for Canada’s vaccine rollout is aiming to ensure provinces aren’t left scrambling when doses don’t arrive as planned, as Ontario recorded record new daily COVID-19 infections.

Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin said 855,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine that were to have arrived last week are now in the country and distributi­on should wrap up Thursday. Ontario

Premier Doug Ford has blamed Moderna lags for immunizati­on clinics closing their doors or cancelling appointmen­ts in recent days.

Fortin said quality assurance backlogs, not production issues, have led to delays of about a week to 10 days for Moderna shipments. Four million more doses of that vaccine are expected by the end of May and deliveries are to come every two weeks instead of three.

“We’re fully aware the provinces are making adjustment­s and we’re trying to narrow this down as much as possible so that they don’t find themselves in situations where they have to constantly react to perceived delays,” Fortin said Thursday.

Ontario reported a record-high of 4,736 new COVID-19 infections Thursday, along with 659 patients in intensive care and 29 more deaths.

Dr. Susy Hota, medical director of infection prevention and control at Toronto’s University Health Network, said the province needs to tighten up its stay-at-home order if infections are to stop accelerati­ng.

“It’s clearly not doing the job,” she said. “We’re 10 days in, and we’re hitting the highest numbers that we’ve seen and that trajectory is still upward — and upward quickly enough that it’s causing alarm.”

Hota said the Ford government should take a hard look at what businesses and activities truly are essential and make sure workers are supported if they have to stay home.

Also Thursday, Dr. Howard Njoo, federal deputy chief public health officer, suggested a swifter ramp-up in vaccinatio­ns alone would likely not have thwarted the third wave taking hold in much of Canada.

“Vaccines are one tool in our tool box and a very important tool. But it’s not the vaccines alone that are going to solve it all,” he said.

Njoo said maintainin­g tight public-health measures is key, especially in the face of more transmissi­ble and dangerous virus variants, adding that Canadians need to “double down.”

He said it’s looking good for all Canadians to be offered their first vaccine dose by around June and their second dose by the end of the summer.

Hota said a speedier vaccine rollout likely would have made a difference in stemming the third wave, pointing to a steep drop in deaths and hospitaliz­ations after vaccines were made available in long-term care homes.

“How much of an impact is always the question, because it’s not going to be perfect coverage.”

Also Thursday, widespread closures took effect in Nunavut’s capital city after Iqaluit reported its first case of COVID-19 since the pandemic started.

Quebec, meanwhile, announced more than 1,513 new cases of COVID19 and 15 more fatalities.

Manitoba confirmed its first case of the P. 1 variant first found in Brazil, as it reported 153 new cases.

In Atlantic Canada, New Brunswick reported eight new cases, Nova Scotia had three and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador had two.

 ??  ?? Dany Fortin
Dany Fortin
 ??  ?? Howard Njoo
Howard Njoo

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