National Post

Objective is maximizing number of doses out of every vial

- National Post, with files from Kevin Libin Twitter: Ryantumilt­y rtumilty@postmedia.com

“In the review, it was determined six full doses can be obtained reliably and consistent­ly from each vaccine vial.”

each dose of the vaccine is a very small amount of liquid, just 0.3 millilitre­s of vaccine combined with a saline solution. Some wasted vaccine is inevitable in the process of injecting the shots, but Health Canada is confident there will still be room for that even with the sixth dose being added.

When the possible change was first announced several provinces expressed doubts about their ability to consistent­ly get six doses from each vial. Sharma said the company made a strong case to Health Canada that the extra dose would be there.

“What the company has come in and has demonstrat­ed through their studies is that if you’re using those syringes reliably, using the good technique in terms of drawing up the dose and administer­ing them, then you should be able to get that sixth dose reliably.”

Alexandra Hilkene, a spokespers­on for Ontario Health Minister Christine elliott, said they expect the federal government to deliver the special syringes, but believed this was a positive step.

“We are encouraged by this developmen­t from Health Canada and remain ready to administer the COVID-19 vaccine and expand vaccinatio­n sites as soon as we receive supply from the federal government,” she said in an email.

Marla Macinnis, a spokespers­on for the Nova Scotia government, said they were working to get more of the special syringes and ultimately the decision meant a faster vaccine effort.

“We are working with the National Operations Centre to access low-dead volume syringes and to procure an additional supply on our own,” she said. “This will mean more Nova Scotians will receive their vaccine sooner.

A source in the Alberta government was more critical. They said the province was more consistent­ly getting the sixth dose from

1.00.80.60.40.2.0 vials, but it was not happening every time. They suggested Health Canada accepting the change was proof the federal government had little leverage in its dealings with vaccine manufactur­ers.

Conservati­ve leader erin O’toole said the government should offer more detail and should have pushed to ensure Pfizer meets its full commitment and makes up any doses lost as part of this change.

“Today’s announceme­nt means that the Liberal government is allowing Pfizer to send fewer vials of vaccines to Canada,” he said in a statement. “Mandating that the provinces do more with less means health care workers will need to retrain and change tack in the middle of a pandemic.”

Maj.-gen. dany Fortin, who is overseeing the government’s vaccine distributi­on effort, said the government had placed large orders for the low dead-space syringes and had already received millions that could be moved out to provinces. The government was also planning training webinars for health-care workers to help them consistent­ly get the doses in arms.

“What we are doing is ensuring that we have the right equipment, the right training at all levels, so that we can draw a maximum amount of doses out of every vial.”

The change will be felt beginning next week: a shipment that was expected to include 335,000 doses will now contain 400,000, without any increase in the number of vials sent to Canada.

The following week, what was to be a 400,000-dose shipment, will become 475,000 doses.

If Pfizer stays on that pace through next month, it will meet and exceed its commitment to provide four million doses by the end of March.

The government is still waiting to hear how many doses of the Moderna vaccine it can expect in the next shipment, the week of Feb. 22. Moderna is dealing with supply chain issues that have reduced the volume of some shipments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada