Friday, April 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada can supply potential 4th doses: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2022 11:13 AM
  • Canada can supply potential 4th doses: Trudeau

As infections fuelled by the Omicron variant threaten to overwhelm Canada's health system, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising the provinces will have enough COVID-19 vaccines to provide everyone eligible booster shots and fourth doses if they become necessary.

Trudeau made the pledge in a statement issued late Monday after he spoke with provincial and territorial leaders, saying Ottawa will do all it can to help them cope with the fifth wave of the pandemic.

"(The premiers) expressed concern over the strain on health-care systems, businesses, workers and families across the country," the statement said. "They raised the need to strengthen health-care systems, noting the particular challenges with health human resources capacity."

The federal government has said provinces and territories will receive a combined 140 million rapid tests this month, although the statement did not provide details on when the deliveries will be scheduled.

Meanwhile, hospitalizations related to COVID-19 continued to surge throughout Canada on Tuesday.

Quebec reported an all-time high of 2,742 hospitalizations, 255 of whom were in intensive care, while Ontario reported 3,220 hospitalizations, with 477 patients in the ICU and 250 COVID-19 patients on ventilators.

On Monday, Quebec's director of public health, Dr. Horacio Arruda, tendered his resignation, citing an erosion in public confidence in health-protection measures.

In recent weeks, the province has reinstated several stringent health measures including a curfew for the second year in a row. As well, the province has reported 12,028 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic — a per-capita death rate that is almost double that of Ontario.

Meanwhile, the provinces recorded a combined total of 20,279 new COVID cases on Monday, although the actual number is likely much higher due to a lack of access to testing.

In Alberta, the chief medical officer of health, Deena Hinshaw, said the active case count released Monday by the provincial government — 57,000 — is probably 10 times lower than the actual number.

"It's my belief that we need to prepare for a significant impact (to the health system) at this point given the cases we've seen," Hinshaw said, adding that only high-risk cases are now eligible for PCR tests, including continuing care residents and front-line health-care workers.

The rapid spread of Omicron across the country has prompted the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to advise Americans to avoid travelling to Canada.

In Ontario, Premier Doug Ford confirmed students will return to school classrooms on Jan. 17. The schools were shut last week as the government enacted other public health measures amid growing strain on the province's health system and pandemic-related staff shortages across essential workforces.

The government said promised shipments of N95 masks were sent to all school boards and school authorities as of Monday, while some shipments to child-care centres were still to go out this week. As well, the province is accelerating boosters for education workers and installing more HEPA air filters.

Schools reopened across British Columbia and Alberta on Monday with slightly higher absence rates among students and teachers in some districts after a prolonged Christmas break.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Jim Pattison Makes $4 Million Matching Donation to Kick Start Upgrades to 10-Year-Old Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre

Jim Pattison Makes $4 Million Matching Donation to Kick Start Upgrades to 10-Year-Old Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre
The 188,000 square-foot award-winning LEED Gold outpatient facility located at the Green Timbers site near Surrey Memorial Hospital (SMH) was opened in 2011, constructed at a cost of $237 million, to relieve pressure on the health care system by consolidating the services that don’t require an overnight stay at SMH, into one stand-alone facility.

Jim Pattison Makes $4 Million Matching Donation to Kick Start Upgrades to 10-Year-Old Jim Pattison Outpatient Care and Surgery Centre

Canadians trapped in Syria turn to Federal Court

Canadians trapped in Syria turn to Federal Court
The application was submitted on behalf of several Canadians with relatives, including more than a dozen children, trapped in Syria, and calls on the court to order the government to take "all reasonable steps" to repatriate them.    

Canadians trapped in Syria turn to Federal Court

New military ad campaign to be aimed at women

New military ad campaign to be aimed at women
The Canadian Armed Forces, which has long struggled to boost the number of women in its ranks, hopes to have them represent one-quarter of members by 2026.

New military ad campaign to be aimed at women

Ottawa repeats support offer to Saskatchewan

Ottawa repeats support offer to Saskatchewan
In a conversation with Premier Scott Moe yesterday, the Prime Minister's Office says the two leaders spoke about Saskatchewan's COVID-19 cases, increasing vaccination efforts and what the province needs to overcome the fourth wave of the pandemic.

Ottawa repeats support offer to Saskatchewan

Younger grades in Vancouver, Surrey to wear masks

Younger grades in Vancouver, Surrey to wear masks
The Surrey Board of Education issued a news release Wednesday saying it would also be mandating masks for all students in the district, from kindergarten to Grade 12, starting Monday. The board said it is partnering with Fraser Health to consider hosting vaccine clinics to increase vaccination rates.    

Younger grades in Vancouver, Surrey to wear masks

Canada marks Day for Truth and Reconciliation

Canada marks Day for Truth and Reconciliation
Singing and drumming were scheduled to ring out at 2:15 p.m. from Kamloops where the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc Nation announced in May that ground-penetrating radar had detected what are believed to be 215 unmarked graves at the site of one of the largest former residential schools.

Canada marks Day for Truth and Reconciliation