Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada's vaccine rate doubled as COVID cases fall

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2021 10:17 AM
  • Canada's vaccine rate doubled as COVID cases fall

Canada's deputy chief medical officer says the country's COVID-19 vaccination rates have doubled in five weeks, reaching nearly 20 million doses administered to date, while daily cases continue to decline.

 But Dr. Howard Njoo says Canadians should take care to maintain the country's progress this Victoria Day long weekend.

 Njoo is urging people choose lower-risk outdoor activities and follow the public health advice of their respective jurisdictions. 

Daily COVID-19 cases have dropped by 25 per cent over the past seven days, Njoo says, and while hospitalizations, deaths and critical-care admissions remain high, those figures are also decreasing.

Meanwhile, Transport Minister Omar Alghabra says Canada is extending its ban on incoming flights from India and Pakistan for another month through June 21. 

The flight ban that began April 22 was set to expire on Saturday.

Intergovernmental Affiairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc says 58 per cent of adults have now received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. He says the country is on track to administer a first vaccine dose to all eligible Canadians by the end of June, and to fully vaccinate them by September.

Njoo says Canada has seen a 10 per cent decrease in hospitalized cases, and a four per cent drop in ICU admissions compared to last week. Deaths are down 15 per cent.

Earlier Friday, Ontario's top doctor said the province is moving forward with administering the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine for second doses only.

Dr. David Williams says the National Advisory Committee on Immunization does not recommend mixing vaccine doses — getting an mRNA vaccine for a second jab after receiving a first dose of AstraZeneca — because trial data is still not available.

Several provinces stopped administering AstraZeneca for first doses earlier the month, citing dwindling supply and risk of a rare blood clotting disorder seen in a small number of recipients of the viral vector vaccine.

 Manitoba, which has seen an increase in COVID-19 cases this month, is expanding its vaccine rollout to allow all Indigenous people in the province to book a second vaccine shot on May 24. Manitoba reported a record 603 COVID cases on Thursday.

 The public health lead for First Nations says Indigenous people have made up 40 to 60 per cent of intensive care admissions during the second and third waves of the pandemic.

 Ontario, which administered a record 158,000 vaccines on Thursday, reported 1,890 new cases Friday. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Young People Get Training, Mentorship To Work In Arts, Culture

Young People Get Training, Mentorship To Work In Arts, Culture
These grants are part of the B.C. government’s record level of funding to the BC Arts Council. 

Young People Get Training, Mentorship To Work In Arts, Culture

B.C. Investing In EV Skills Training For A Cleaner, Better Future

BCIT’s EV Maintenance Training Program will be available as a part-time studies course in early 2020.    

B.C. Investing In EV Skills Training For A Cleaner, Better Future

Province Gives $4.93M Boost To School-based Gang Prevention Program ‘ERASE’

More at-risk students will get the supports they need to get off the path to gang life through the expansion of the Erase (expect respect and a safe education) school-based gang and gun violence prevention program.

Province Gives $4.93M Boost To School-based Gang Prevention Program ‘ERASE’

Study Suggests Infants Be Tested For Autism If Older Siblings Diagnosed

Study Suggests Infants Be Tested For Autism If Older Siblings Diagnosed
VANCOUVER - Canadian researchers have led a study suggesting infants be tested for autism spectrum disorder before symptoms appear if an older sibling has already been diagnosed with the neurobiological condition.    

Study Suggests Infants Be Tested For Autism If Older Siblings Diagnosed

Telus To Buy German Call Centre Firm Competence Call Center For $1.3 Billion

Telus To Buy German Call Centre Firm Competence Call Center For $1.3 Billion
VANCOUVER - Telus Corp. is buying a German call centre company through its Telus International subsidiary for about $1.3 billion.    

Telus To Buy German Call Centre Firm Competence Call Center For $1.3 Billion

Church Of Atheism Denied Charitable Status As Court Finds It Isn't A Religion

A federal court has ruled that the so-called Church of Atheism is not a church at all, and can't be treated like one for tax purposes.    

Church Of Atheism Denied Charitable Status As Court Finds It Isn't A Religion