Saskatoon StarPhoenix

20 percent fully vaxxed in Canada, tracker shows

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Canada has hit two of the vaccinatio­n targets government officials have previously said were necessary for the easing of public health restrictio­ns imposed due to COVID-19.

An independen­t website founded by a University of Saskatchew­an student and tracking federal and provincial vaccine data says just over 20 per cent of eligible Canadians — those 12 years old and above — are now fully vaccinated.

And just over 75 per cent of eligible Canadians have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Federal modelling completed in the spring suggested that if 75 per cent of eligible Canadians had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and 20 per cent had two, provinces could safely begin easing restrictio­ns on public movement without overwhelmi­ng hospitals again.

The modelling also suggested that when 75 per cent of eligible residents are fully vaccinated, officials could begin to loosen personal measures like physical distancing and wearing masks.

But chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said those models didn't include the highly contagious Delta variant, which she said surged by 66 per cent over the past week.

In Toronto, the city is also reporting more than 75 per cent of its adult population has received a first dose, while more than 25 per cent has had a second jab.

The COVID-19 Tracker Canada website is run by volunteers and uses daily federal and provincial data.

It said more than 31.7 million doses of approved COVID-19 vaccines have been administer­ed across Canada as of early Saturday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Quebec Health Minister Christian Dube is encouragin­g Quebecers inoculated against COVID-19 to get their proof of vaccinatio­n if they haven't done so already.

In a tweet this morning, Dube posted a link to the provincial government's website where vaccinatio­n validation can be obtained.

Three new regions will move to the green or least restrictiv­e level of the provincial pandemic response plan on Monday: Bas-saint-laurent, Saguenay-lac-saintjean and Mauricie-centredu-quebec.

The zone change will ease restrictio­ns including limits on gatherings in homes, which can now host up to 10 people from three different addresses. In yellow zones, only two families are permitted.

The changes come as Quebec continues its downward trajectory of COVID-19 infections, logging 103 new cases on Sunday.

In Toronto, the city is scaling up doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to compensate for a delay in a shipment of 162,000 Pfizer-biontech shots to Ontario.

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