Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

AstraZeneca shots go to priority workers in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2021 11:34 PM
  • AstraZeneca shots go to priority workers in B.C.

British Columbia's initial shipment of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine will be used to inoculate workers in vulnerable sectors including food processing plants, farms and greenhouses as well as industries requiring employees to live in congregate settings, health officials announced Monday.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix said the vaccine is being allocated to industries where barriers and full use of personal protective equipment can be challenging and where outbreaks and clusters are ongoing.

"Immunizing workers in these settings will not only protect workers, it will also protect the communities around them, including many rural, remote and Indigenous communities," Henry and Dix said in a joint statement.

The highest-risk categories of work sites were identified through a task force established by the provincial health officer last November.

They include sites where poultry, fruit and fish are processed as well as agricultural operations and large industrial camps where close living quarters make isolation and quarantine difficult, contributing to outbreaks.

Henry and Dix said the BC Immunization Committee is reviewing the latest data and recommendations from its federal counterpart to determine additional workplaces that will be prioritized for immunization with the AstraZeneca vaccine.

The effort to inoculate vulnerable workers complements the province's age-based vaccination plan, which is one week ahead of schedule, with seniors aged 84 and older, plus Indigenous elders 65 and up, currently booking appointments for a shot.

The Health Ministry said people aged 83 and older can make an appointment Tuesday and the age eligibility drops daily until anyone 80 and up can make arrangements for a COVID-19 jab by the end of the week.

Added staff at call centres across B.C. have helped speed up the process and the province says the centres are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.

An estimated 100,000 people are included in the 80- to 84-year-old group and phone appointments are the only way to make a booking in all regions except Fraser Health.

Health Minister Adrian Dix has said a provincewide online system is expected within weeks.

Monday also marks the launch of vaccination clinics across B.C. for Indigenous elders and seniors over 90 who already have appointments.

Clinics also begin in Prince Rupert and Port Edward, where all adults are being immunized, regardless of age, due to stubbornly high infection rates in that northwestern region.

At last count on Friday, B.C. had reported just under 87,000 cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began and had administered almost 381,000 doses of vaccine.

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver in Broncos crash Jaskirat Singh Sidhu bids to stay in Canada

Driver in Broncos crash Jaskirat Singh Sidhu bids to stay in Canada
Jaskirat Singh Sidhu is now waiting for the Canada Border Services Agency to write a report that will recommend whether he be allowed to stay in his adopted country or be deported.

Driver in Broncos crash Jaskirat Singh Sidhu bids to stay in Canada

Montreal school salutes alumna, VP Kamala Harris

Montreal school salutes alumna, VP Kamala Harris
Harris, 56, moved briefly to Montreal at age 12, attending Face and later Westmount High School before graduating in 1981.

Montreal school salutes alumna, VP Kamala Harris

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton
She was wearing a beige trench coat with fur lining, a blue and white sweater, orange scarf, black leather pants, and black and white runners and carrying a blue and brown bag.

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say
Canada's small supply of vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech will shrink even more over the next four weeks as the company slows production while upgrading its facility in Belgium.

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix
The alert says users of drugs contaminated with benzos might be difficult to rouse and could also be slow to respond to naloxone, the drug that reverses opioid overdoses.

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a major change to the program in the government's fall economic update.

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO