Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. AstraZeneca recipients can choose second dose

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2021 03:44 PM
  • B.C. AstraZeneca recipients can choose second dose

British Columbia residents who received the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine will be able to choose if they want to stay with the same shot or take one of the other options.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says those who received the AstraZeneca vaccine earlier this year made "the right choice" in getting vaccinated, and helped to ease the COVID-19 caseload in the province.

She says research has shown that it is safe and effective to mix and match the COVID-19 vaccine options.

Henry also said the province is having issues maintaining a steady supply of the Moderna vaccine, meaning some who received it as a first dose may get the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine as their second.

B.C. reported 199 new cases of COVID-19 Thursday, for a total of 144,866, along with two new deaths.

Henry says 71.8 per cent of the province's eligible adult population has received a first dose of vaccine.

MORE National ARTICLES

New approach to COVID-19 shots in Prince Rupert

New approach to COVID-19 shots in Prince Rupert
The first clinics for roughly 12,000 Prince Rupert-area residents begin Monday and continue until April 1.

New approach to COVID-19 shots in Prince Rupert

NDP, Bloc accuse Tories of obstructing legislation

NDP, Bloc accuse Tories of obstructing legislation
Julian's criticism came after the Conservatives blocked his attempt Monday to break the legislative impasse.

NDP, Bloc accuse Tories of obstructing legislation

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday
There have been 182 new confirmed COVID-19 cases that are variants of concern in our province, for a total of 576 cases.

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports
The Province is providing one-time funding of up to $10.7 million for inter-city bus operators and up to $16.5 million for regional airports to support operations between April 1, 2021, and March 31, 2022. 

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure
Telus president Darren Entwistle says in a statement he is "incredibly sorry" for the frustrations that residents have experienced trying to connect to the call centres and the company can and will do better.

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister
KXL was to take more Alberta oil across the United States and down to ports and refineries on the Gulf Coast in Texas.

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister