Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada under pressure to change Pfizer doses label

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2021 06:59 PM
  • Canada under pressure to change Pfizer doses label

Canada's procurement department is scrambling to source smaller syringes for Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, anticipating that Health Canada will agree to change the label to say each vial of the precious substance contains six doses instead of five.

Pfizer formally requested the change Jan. 22, and Health Canada's regulatory team that approved the vaccine for use Dec. 9 is now considering the new material.

If the label is amended, Pfizer will ship fewer vials to Canada overall because Canada's contract with the vaccine-maker is based on 40 million doses, not vials.

That sixth dose was a surprise find by medical professionals who found using special syringes could extract the extra dose.

But those syringes are not common and have become the latest COVID-19 hot commodity after both Europe and the United States agreed to the label change earlier this month.

A spokeswoman for Procurement Minister Anita Anand says more than 87 million of the smaller syringes have been ordered but can't say how many have been delivered or when the rest will arrive.

MORE National ARTICLES

Macklem: Managing risk critical to recovery

Macklem: Managing risk critical to recovery
Tiff Macklem said Canada has managed the crisis better than many countries, noting the country's risk-cautious culture -- not usually celebrated -- protected the economy during the financial crisis a decade ago and has helped during the current recession.

Macklem: Managing risk critical to recovery

PBO charts path for carbon tax to meet Paris goals

PBO charts path for carbon tax to meet Paris goals
As it is, Canada is projected to fall short of its goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.

PBO charts path for carbon tax to meet Paris goals

Military students report widespread sex misconduct

Military students report widespread sex misconduct
That was not far off the 71 per cent of students at other post-secondary institutions across Canada who reported witnessing or experiencing such behaviour.

Military students report widespread sex misconduct

COVID-19 accelerating privacy risks: watchdog

COVID-19 accelerating privacy risks: watchdog
The spread of the virus and the resulting need to distance oneself from others has accelerated the digital revolution, bringing both benefits and risks for privacy, Therrien said.

COVID-19 accelerating privacy risks: watchdog

WATCH: US President Donald Trump called COVID19 a blessing from God

WATCH: US President Donald Trump called COVID19 a blessing from God
 After calling his coronavirus infection a blessing from god, US President Donald J. Trump refuses to participate in second debate if it is virtual. "Wouldn't waste my time," he told Fox News.

WATCH: US President Donald Trump called COVID19 a blessing from God

Feds double COVID-19 fund for abused women

Feds double COVID-19 fund for abused women
Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef said the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the conditions that make women, children and gender-diverse people vulnerable to violence.

Feds double COVID-19 fund for abused women