Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 vaccine delay temporary setback for B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2021 12:25 AM
  • COVID-19 vaccine delay temporary setback for B.C.

British Columbia's top doctor says production delays for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are a temporary setback that will slow down the delivery of first doses in the province over the next few weeks.

But Dr. Bonnie Henry says B.C. is still on track to vaccinate its most vulnerable residents by the end of March, ahead of a significant expansion of the province's immunization program in April.

She says a shortfall of about 60,000 doses of vaccine should be made up in March.

B.C. has recorded 1,330 new cases of COVID-19 since Friday, including 301 in the last 24 hours — the lowest single-day infection rate in more than two months.

The death toll from the illness rose to 1,078 as 31 more people died in the same three-day period.

The number of active cases dipped to 4,326, including 343 in hospital.

Henry says about 80 per cent of long-term care residents in the hard-hit Fraser and Vancouver Coastal health regions have received their first doses of COVID-19 vaccine, with more being delivered across the province.

MORE National ARTICLES

Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

Ask Hugo Slim about teenaged climate change activist Greta Thunberg, and one thought comes to mind: if only there were a young person like her who was that worried about nuclear weapons.    

Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired

Some University of Alberta students want the school to fire an assistant lecturer who denies the Holodomor, the mass genocide of Ukrainian people carried out by the former Soviet Union in the early 1930s.    

Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired

Trudeau To Mark NATO's Birthday Amid Questions About Military Alliance's Future

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is off to London where he will spend the next few days trying to give the NATO military alliance a boost amid existential questions about its future — while defending Canada's own commitment to it.

Trudeau To Mark NATO's Birthday Amid Questions About Military Alliance's Future

Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection

Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection
QUEBEC - Voters head to the polls today in a Quebec City riding that could be in play after being a Liberal stronghold for more than 50 years.

Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection

Premiers Say They've Reached Consensus On Priority Areas

Canada's premiers say they want the federal government to increase health-care transfer funds by just over five per cent and allow the provinces to opt out of any national pharmacare program.

Premiers Say They've Reached Consensus On Priority Areas

B.C. Commits $50 Million To Improve Internet In Rural And Indigenous Communities -PICS

Ravi Kahlon, the parliamentary secretary for rural development, says the grant funding is expected to benefit people living in up to 200 rural and Indigenous communities.

B.C. Commits $50 Million To Improve Internet In Rural And Indigenous Communities -PICS