Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2021 05:06 PM
  • Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week

Canada is scheduled to receive two million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine this week as provinces continue to ramp up their immunization efforts.

The two million shots represent the only expected shipments in what should be a comparatively quiet week of vaccine arrivals after Moderna delivered one million doses ahead of schedule last week.

The next shipment of Moderna jabs isn't due until next week, while the federal government has not said when Canada will receive more doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca or Johnson and Johnson vaccines.

The arrival of more Pfizer-BioNTech shots comes as British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec are set to expand the list of people eligible for vaccines over the next seven days.

The expansions are due largely to the steady supply of vaccines from Pfizer and BioNTech, which are slated to deliver two million doses a week through the month of May before increasing the weekly figure to 2.4 million in June.

Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin, the military officer overseeing the federal government's vaccine distribution effort, said last week that Canada was expecting another 650,000 AstraZeneca shots from the COVAX initiative.

The exact delivery schedule, however, has yet to be finalized.

Canada has also been in negotiations with the United States for more AstraZeneca doses after President Joe Biden suggested last month that Washington may release some of its unused stockpile.

Those talks come amid questions about the AstraZeneca shot, which has been linked to a new and very rare vaccine-induced blood clotting syndrome.

Twelve cases had been confirmed in Canada after about two million doses given as of Friday. Three people have died.

The AstraZeneca and Johnson and Johnson vaccines use a similar technology, while the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna shots use a new technology dubbed mRNA.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization last week recommended that Canadians who aren’t at high risk from COVID-19 may want to wait until a dose of Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna is available.

That prompted allegations that NACI was sowing the seeds of confusion and vaccine hesitancy.

Alberta and other parts of Canada remain mired in the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, even as hospitalization rates have started to tick downward in provinces such as Ontario and Quebec.

Many parts of the country face tight restrictions, with schools closed across Ontario and Alberta and patios shut down in Montreal, Toronto and — as of this Monday — Calgary.

Provinces reported 265,509 new vaccinations administered on Sunday for a total of 15,917,555 doses given.

Nationwide, 1,248,931 people or 3.3 per cent of the population had been fully vaccinated. The provinces have administered doses at a rate of 41,999.627 per 100,000.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. bends COVID-19 variant curve: report

B.C. bends COVID-19 variant curve: report
Although the curve is bending in B.C., the research group says hospitalizations and intensive care admissions will likely remain high through May because the variants first detected in the United Kingdom and Brazil have more severe symptoms.

B.C. bends COVID-19 variant curve: report

International effort thwarts $20,000 fraud aimed at 96 year old Vancouver senior

International effort thwarts $20,000 fraud aimed at 96 year old Vancouver senior
Fraudster’s contacted the woman over the phone and convinced her to send $20,000 in small bills, hidden between two books, to the United Kingdom. The woman’s nephew discovered the fraud and alerted police.

International effort thwarts $20,000 fraud aimed at 96 year old Vancouver senior

System-wide 'failure' prompted military review: PM

System-wide 'failure' prompted military review: PM
Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan announced Arbour's appointment nearly three months after the government and Armed Forces were rocked by allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour by the military's very top commanders.

System-wide 'failure' prompted military review: PM

Sikh advocacy group says India blocked aid website

Sikh advocacy group says India blocked aid website
Anshuman Gaur, India's deputy high commissioner to Canada, says his government has labelled Sikhs For Justice a terrorist group, but could not comment on whether the state blocked its site.

Sikh advocacy group says India blocked aid website

Ford says 'borders are broken' in plea to Ottawa

Ford says 'borders are broken' in plea to Ottawa
Ford says if it were up to him, he’d shut down Toronto's Pearson International Airport and the province’s land borders to stop some travellers from exploiting loopholes in federal measures.

Ford says 'borders are broken' in plea to Ottawa

Deficit hit $282 billion in February, feds say

Deficit hit $282 billion in February, feds say
The deficit from April to February compares to a deficit of $7 billion over the same period one year earlier.

Deficit hit $282 billion in February, feds say