Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Experts debate easing rules for fully vaccinated

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2021 01:32 PM
  • Experts debate easing rules for fully vaccinated

As provinces accelerate their efforts to get their populations fully vaccinated against COVID-19, some people are calling for the federal government to issue clear guidance on what people can do once they receive both shots.

Ontario's health minister and some experts say Ottawa should provide a framework spelling out which behaviours are considered safe for vaccinated adults, similar to what was issued by the U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but opinion is divided on whether it's a good idea.

Dr. Nazeem Muhajarine, a professor of community health and epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan, believes the federal government should be offering some general direction about what people can or cannot do once they're fully vaccinated with two doses.

However, he believes more people need to get their second dose and more data on vaccine effectiveness against variants is needed before restrictions on mask-wearing can be lifted for the fully vaccinated.

Azim Shariff, a social psychologist at the University of British Columbia, believes allowing greater freedom to fully vaccinated people is worth considering, because it can work as an incentive to encourage hesitant people to get the shot.

But Dr. Donald Vinh, an infectious diseases specialist at the McGill University Health Center, believes that creating a separate set of restrictions for people who are fully vaccinated is a risky idea.

He says the guidelines issued in the United States are difficult to enforce and have led many people to abandon masks and distancing, whether they were vaccinated or not.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee
Michigan has refused to concede that the state's own experts have concluded there are no clear alternatives to the pipeline, he wrote to the governor in a letter earlier this year.

Pipeline politics back before Commons committee

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie
Sonya Savage also says it’s critical to push back constantly against any false narrative that casts Alberta’s wellspring industry in a negative light.

Minister defends attack petition on Bigfoot movie

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19
The event was to take place in Surrey on April 24th. The Surrey Vaisakhi parade is the largest in Canada and outside of India drawing crowds in excess of over half a million. 

Surrey Vaisakhi parade cancelled for 2021 due to COVID19

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity
The notice says these fall somewhere between relatively common events such as seasonal floods and highly improbably risks such as an asteroid hitting Earth.

Wanted: Ideas to prepare for next major calamity

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid
O'Toole says a Conservative government also wouldn't cut aid funding, but would place a greater focus on measuring outcomes associated with that money.

O'Toole says he wouldn't cut foreign aid

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI
The decision reverses a recommendation made by the body two weeks ago when the panel of vaccine experts said AstraZeneca hadn't included enough people over the age of 65 in its clinical trials.

AstraZeneca vaccine OK for seniors: NACI