Ottawa Citizen

Tam stresses importance of second dose

Delta variant found `essentiall­y across Canada'

- MELISSA COUTO ZUBER

As Canada's COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rollout continues to pick up speed, the country's top public health officer is reiteratin­g the importance of receiving a full two-dose series, especially with the latest variant of concern now detected in several provinces.

Dr. Theresa Tam said Friday that the recently dubbed “Delta” variant, which was first detected in India, has been found “essentiall­y across Canada.”

The variant, believed to be behind recent spikes in COVID-19 cases in parts of the United Kingdom, has demonstrat­ed to be more transmissi­ble than previous versions of the virus, Tam said.

Preliminar­y data released last week from Public Health England suggested that COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZenec­a were effective against the new variant after two doses, but less efficacy was shown with only one dose.

Sixty-five per cent of eligible Canadians had received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine as of Friday, but vaccine trackers show roughly seven per cent of the eligible population were fully vaccinated.

Tam said the heightened transmissi­bility of Delta was “obviously a characteri­stic of concern.”

“(It) means in under-vaccinated population­s, or if we let go (of) public health measures ... in the context of a transmissi­ble variant, that variant could well takeoff and replace other viruses in the communitie­s,” she said.

“So it is very important to get that second dose when variants such as the Delta variant is in our community.”

Several provinces are speeding up their second dose rollouts as more vaccine supply pours into the country.

Prime Minister Trudeau announced Friday that large shipments of vaccines will continue through the summer, with more than two million Pfizer doses expected each week until the end of August.

Trudeau said nine million Pfizer doses will arrive in July with another 9.1 million expected in August. He added that Canada has also negotiated an option for three million more Pfizer doses to be delivered in September.

Trudeau said he's been encouraged by the country's vaccine rollout, adding that Canadians have “reason to be hopeful about this summer and fall.”

“The more people vaccinated, the safer we all are . ... So let's start looking forward to more of what we love, from camping to dinner with friends,” he said.

COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations continue to trend downward in parts of the country while vaccinatio­ns ramp up.

Tam said the latest seven-day average for daily cases in the country was 2,300, down 73 per cent from the peak of the third wave.

Hospitaliz­ations were down 47 per cent, ICU admissions were down 31 per cent and deaths down were down 35 per cent, Tam added.

Twenty-five million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administer­ed across Canada, with 2.8 million Canadians getting a dose in the past week alone.

Data for how many Delta variant cases have been detected in Canada was not available on the Public Health Agency of Canada's website as of Friday. The webpage said PHAC was in the process of updating its graphical view to include the Delta variant.

The webpage said the B.1.1.7 variant, or Alpha variant first detected in the U.K., continues to account for most of the variant cases in Canada, adding that Delta has “only been recently identified and thus is less understood.”

Peel Public Health in Ontario, one of the country's most COVID-ravaged areas, said as of Wednesday 100 cases of the Delta variant had been identified in the region, leading Brampton, Ont., Mayor Patrick Brown to urge the province to prioritize the area for second doses.

Variants of concern are typically identified through genomic sequencing, a laborious and expensive process by which the virus's entire genome is analyzed to detect mutations.

The U.K. government said in a report last month that both Pfizer and AstraZenec­a were 33 per cent effective against symptomati­c disease caused by the Delta variant three weeks after the first dose, but that number rose above 80 after two doses were complete.

Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease physician in Hamilton and an associate professor at McMaster University, said most of the U.K.'s recent Delta cases have been in unvaccinat­ed individual­s, with the vaccines seeming to still offer good protection against death and severe disease.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a news conference Friday that Canadians have “reason to be hopeful” as two million doses of vaccine a week arrive until late August.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a news conference Friday that Canadians have “reason to be hopeful” as two million doses of vaccine a week arrive until late August.

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