The Daily Courier

Ontario ramps up vaccinatio­ns

Moderna vaccine starts arriving in the North

- By COLETTE DERWORIZ

Ontario is ramping up its COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns after facing criticism for scaling down operations over the holidays, while the Moderna vaccine has started arriving in Canada’s North.

Retired Gen. Rick Hillier, who is leading Ontario’s vaccine program, said the decision to close clinics over Christmas Day and Boxing Day was the wrong one.

“We’ve heard the voices of the people of Ontario saying ‘get on with this’ and that’s what we are going to do,” he said at a news conference Tuesday”

“We will not take any more days off.” At least 63,887 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine have been administer­ed across Canada so far, according to a vaccine tracker run by a student at the University of Saskatchew­an that’s based on news updates from each province.

Hillier said more than 14,000 people in Ontario have received their first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech shot as of Tuesday morning.

He said he has also asked Health Canada to look into whether the Moderna vaccine could be used as a single dose rather than two.

“Maybe with the high efficiency that protects you in the first needle, it would be best for the entire population if we went with just a one-shot vaccinatio­n program with Moderna,” he said.

If approved, he said, it could potentiall­y allow millions of people to get immunized faster.

Health Canada’s chief medical adviser Dr. Supriya Sharma, who is tasked with overseeing approval of vaccines, said last week that officials are still recommendi­ng a second dose.

“For the Pfizer vaccine, the second dose is given after 21 days,” she said at the time. “For the Moderna, it’s after a month, about 28 days.

“We would say give the first dose and then make sure you can give a second dose in a month.”

Sharma said officials wouldn’t recommend a significan­t delay in the second dose, but there is some flexibilit­y.

Hillier said Ontario is expected to receive roughly 50,000 doses of the Moderna shot by Wednesday, with vaccinatio­ns in long-term care homes set to follow within 48 to 72 hours.

Dr. Jazz Atwal, acting deputy chief provincial public health officer for Manitoba, said the province also expects to receive some of the Moderna vaccine this week and noted officials have already administer­ed 2,177 doses of the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine.

“We’re planning on another 1,000 this week,” he said. “And we’re ramping that up so that next week we’re looking at roughly 6,000 doses to be administer­ed.”

Health Canada said in an email that officials would be providing an update Wednesday on the vaccine roll out across the country.

The Moderna vaccine, which doesn’t require extreme-cold storage, has already started arriving in the North.

Both the Northwest Territorie­s and Yukon have received their first shipments.

The Public Health Agency of Canada said in a tweet that the first doses arrived in Yellowknif­e late Monday, while Yukon Health Social Services Minister Pauline Frost said the territory also received its first shipment of the Moderna vaccine.

Frost said 7,200 doses arrived Monday and more shipments are expected in early January.

She said teams are being trained on safe storage, handling and delivery of the doses before vaccinatio­ns start next week, immunizing vulnerable groups first, such as highrisk long-term care residents and staff.

Yukon has had 60 total cases of COVID19, but none are currently active and 11 test results are pending.

There was one new case of COVID-19 in Newfoundla­nd Tuesday and two cases each in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Ontario reported nearly 4,500 new cases in the past two days, Quebec said it had 2,381 new infections in the past 24 hours and Manitoba said Tuesday it has identified 133 new cases.

Meanwhile, Quebec has become the fourth province to confirm its first case of a more contagious COVID-19 variant.

Health Minister Christian Dube said the person who tested positive is a family member of someone who returned from the United Kingdom on Dec. 11.

Three other provinces have confirmed cases of the new variant in recent days, with three cases in Ontario, one in Alberta and one in British Columbia.

The variant was first identified in the U.K. and has since spread to several other countries.

 ??  ?? The Canadian Press
Retired Gen. Rick Hillier is leading Ontario’s vaccine program.
The Canadian Press Retired Gen. Rick Hillier is leading Ontario’s vaccine program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada