The Peterborough Examiner

PM tells Ontario help is coming

Feds will send Red Cross to assist with deploying mobile vaccinatio­n teams

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says more doses of COVID-19 vaccines are coming soon from Pfizer-BioNTech, and the federal government will deploy the Canadian Red Cross to help Ontario with their mobile vaccinatio­n teams.

Trudeau announced Friday a contract with Pfizer for an additional eight million doses of their vaccine, hours after Canada said its incoming supply from Moderna would be slashed in half through the rest of April.

As Ontario reports recordhigh COVID cases, Trudeau said the federal government will provide more relief to the province, including deploying mobile health units in Toronto and Hamilton.

Health-care equipment including oxygen units and drugs to treat COVID will also be sent, the prime minister said.

Procuremen­t Minister Anita Anand says the first four million of the new eight million Pfizer doses will arrive in May, with two million more coming in June and July, respective­ly. She said Pfizer is also moving another 400,000 doses from the third quarter into June.

Canada’s initial shipment of approximat­ely 300,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine will also arrive during the week of April 27, Anand said, to be delivered to the provinces at the beginning of May.

The increased Pfizer doses help offset another production delay from Moderna. Anand said earlier Friday that Moderna will ship 650,000 doses of its vaccine by the end of the month, instead of the expected 1.2 million.

PROCUREMEN­T MINISTER ANITA ANAND

Anand said in a statement that Moderna advised Canada the limited supply is due to a slower than anticipate­d ramp up of production capacity.

The company also told Canada that one to two million doses of the 12.3 million scheduled for delivery in the second quarter may be delayed until the third quarter.

“We are disappoint­ed, and while we understand the challenges facing suppliers in the current global market for vaccines, our government will continue to press Moderna to fulfil its commitment­s,” Anand said in a statement.

Moderna said in a statement there has been a “shortfall” in estimated doses from the European supply chain, and that it will be “making adjustment­s” to expected delivery quantities in a number of countries, including Canada.

Earlier Friday, the Canadian Medical Associatio­n called for “extraordin­ary” measures, including sharing provincial health-care resources and dropping the per-capita approach to vaccine distributi­on, to address the COVID-19 crisis unfolding in several provinces.

The CMA said it wants the federal government to consider re-prioritizi­ng its vaccine distributi­on strategy to focus on urgent areas instead of distributi­ng to provinces on a per-capita basis.

The organizati­on also said provinces should be sharing its health-care resources with areas that are especially hard-hit, including Ontario and Quebec where ICU capacity is overwhelme­d.

Dr. Ann Collins, president of the CMA, said Canada is at a “critical juncture” of the pandemic, adding a “truly national approach” is needed to combat rising COVID activity in parts of the country.

The CMA said further restrictio­ns “must also be considered” in provinces experienci­ng rapid rates of COVID-19 transmissi­on. Ontario was expected to announce new measures later Friday.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Trudeau announced Friday a contract with Pfizer for an additional eight million doses of their vaccine. The first half is scheduled to arrive in May.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Trudeau announced Friday a contract with Pfizer for an additional eight million doses of their vaccine. The first half is scheduled to arrive in May.

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