The Province

Provinces forced to retool vaccinatio­ns

Ottawa urges drugmaker to get delivery schedule back on track quickly after shipments delayed

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OTTAWA — Canada's procuremen­t minister is urging drugmaker Pfizer-BioNTech to get the country's COVID-19 vaccine delivery schedule back on track as soon as possible as the two provinces hardest hit by the pandemic warned slower shipments will mean changes to their respective game plans.

Anita Anand said she understand­s and shares Canadians' concerns about the drug company's decision to delay internatio­nal vaccine shipments for four weeks to upgrade production facilities in Europe. “We are once again in touch with representa­tives from Pfizer to reiterate firmly the importance for Canada to return to our regular delivery schedule as soon as possible,” she said on Twitter Saturday. “Pfizer assured us that it is deploying all efforts to do just that.”

She noted shipments for the upcoming week will be largely unaffected, and said the government will provide updates as available.

Ontario's chief medical officer of health, Dr. David Williams, said the delay will almost certainly have an effect on the province, though the full impact of the move is not yet known.

In Ontario, long-term care residents, caregivers and staff who already received their first dose of Pfizer's vaccine will receive their second dose between 21 and 27 days later, no more than a week longer than originally planned.

But that time frame will be longer for anyone else receiving the Pfizer vaccine, with second doses being delivered anywhere from 21 to 42 days after the initial shot.

Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, said in a statement that given the current trajectory of the epidemic, cases will continue to rise unless there's significan­t progress in interrupti­ng spread.

The latest forecasts suggest the country could be dealing with 10,000 new daily cases by the end of January. Meanwhile, hospitaliz­ations and deaths, which tend be one to several weeks behind a spike in the disease, are still on the rise.

For the seven-day period ending Jan. 14, Canada averaged 4,705 hospitaliz­ations with 875 patients requiring intensive care treatment. During the same period, an average of 137 deaths were reported daily.

On Saturday, Ontario topped 3,000 cases and added another 51 deaths linked to the virus. In Quebec, 2,225 new infections were reported along with 67 deaths attributed to the virus, pushing the province over the 9,000 death mark since the beginning of the pandemic.

We are ... in touch with ... Pfizer to reiterate firmly the importance for Canada to return to our regular delivery schedule as soon as possible.” Anita Anand

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