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Coronavirus: Canada's race to get more people vaccinated as hospitalizations rise – Global News
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- Coronavirus: Canada’s race to get more people vaccinated as hospitalizations rise Global News
- U.S. investigating five allergic reactions after Pfizer shot CTV News
- Moderna COVID-19 vaccine begins rollout as U.S. races to broaden injection campaign The Globe and Mail
- N.B. COVID-19 roundup: 5 new cases reported, first vaccinations given CBC.ca
- U.S. begins rollout of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine CTV News
- View Full coverage on Google News
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COVID-19: No Moderna or Pfizer vaccine deliveries for B.C. in last week of January – Vancouver Sun


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The provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, said that 40 per cent of B.C.’s Moderna doses had been used so far. Moderna vaccine is stored at a higher temperature than Pfizer’s so is easier to deliver outside Metro Vancouver.
So far, 80 per cent of the roughly 92,000 doses delivered in B.C. have been from Pfizer and the rest from Moderna.
There were 465 cases of COVID-19 reported on Monday and 12 deaths.
There are 4,331 active cases, with 329 being treated in hospital, including 70 in intensive care.
There were no new outbreaks in health care facilities or in the community. An outbreak at The Emerald at Elim Village in Surrey is over with no deaths, leaving 58 active outbreaks in health care facilities.
B.C.’s provincial state of emergency was extended until Feb. 2.
There have been 693 tickets with fines issued, that include 548 for people refusing to comply with a directive, 119 for unlawful gatherings and 26 for violation of provincial health officer liquor rules.
Authorities have issued 85 tickets for people who breached the mandatory two-week quarantine for anyone entering B.C. from outside Canada.
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Pfizer to halt COVID vaccine deliveries to Canada next week, making worse already slow rollout
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Conservative health critic Michelle Rempel Garner said the Liberals had to come clean about the full details of the rollout, so Canadians could see how it stood up to scrutiny.
“When they say that every Canadian will have a dose of vaccine by September, what assumptions have they made on approval, timelines, and availability of other vaccine candidates and if those don’t come to pass what’s plan B?”
She said she wanted the government to succeed, so Canadians could get back to a normal life, but that clearly had not happened.
“I really don’t take any pleasure in saying that they haven’t delivered.”
According to the Bloomberg news service, as of Monday, Canada was 12th in the world on vaccines delivered on a per capita basis. Behind countries like Israel, the U.K. and the United States and the United Arab Emirates, as well as several small European countries.
Israel is the world leader so far having administered first doses to more than 25 per cent of its population primarily using the Pfizer vaccine. Several reports indicated the country had paid more for the vaccines than other countries. it also had agreed to share anonymized patient data from its health system with Pfizer.
The United Kingdom has approved the AstraZeneca vaccine and made it a major part of its rollout. The vaccine, which is not yet approved in either Canada or the United States, does not need to be kept frozen and is easier to distribute. Some countries, like the United Arab Emirates, that are ahead of Canada are using a vaccine from Sinopharm, a Chinese state company.
Trudeau was asked Tuesday why Canada hadn’t ordered more doses for the first quarter of the year. He said there were only so many doses available from the two approved candidates Pfizer and Moderna, before the vaccines were approved and manufacturing could ramp up.
“The challenge is, as of December 1, 2020, there were none of these vaccines being produced anywhere in the world for general use. They were all in testing and trials in the scientific community,” he said.
• Email: rtumilty@postmedia.com | Twitter: ryantumilty
Source: – National Post
Business
Pfizer to halt COVID vaccine deliveries to Canada next week, making worse already slow rollout – National Post


Article content continued
Conservative health critic Michelle Rempel Garner said the Liberals had to come clean about the full details of the rollout, so Canadians could see how it stood up to scrutiny.
“When they say that every Canadian will have a dose of vaccine by September, what assumptions have they made on approval, timelines, and availability of other vaccine candidates and if those don’t come to pass what’s plan B?”
She said she wanted the government to succeed, so Canadians could get back to a normal life, but that clearly had not happened.
“I really don’t take any pleasure in saying that they haven’t delivered.”
According to the Bloomberg news service, as of Monday, Canada was 12th in the world on vaccines delivered on a per capita basis. Behind countries like Israel, the U.K. and the United States and the United Arab Emirates, as well as several small European countries.
Israel is the world leader so far having administered first doses to more than 25 per cent of its population primarily using the Pfizer vaccine. Several reports indicated the country had paid more for the vaccines than other countries. it also had agreed to share anonymized patient data from its health system with Pfizer.
The United Kingdom has approved the AstraZeneca vaccine and made it a major part of its rollout. The vaccine, which is not yet approved in either Canada or the United States, does not need to be kept frozen and is easier to distribute. Some countries, like the United Arab Emirates, that are ahead of Canada are using a vaccine from Sinopharm, a Chinese state company.
Trudeau was asked Tuesday why Canada hadn’t ordered more doses for the first quarter of the year. He said there were only so many doses available from the two approved candidates Pfizer and Moderna, before the vaccines were approved and manufacturing could ramp up.
“The challenge is, as of December 1, 2020, there were none of these vaccines being produced anywhere in the world for general use. They were all in testing and trials in the scientific community,” he said.
• Email: rtumilty@postmedia.com | Twitter: ryantumilty
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