Wednesday, May 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Feds expect 600K vaccine doses this week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2021 02:12 PM
  • Feds expect 600K vaccine doses this week

Canada is set for a relatively quiet few days on the COVID-19 vaccine front with only about 600,000 Pfizer-BioNTech doses set to arrive this week.

The two pharmaceutical firms were originally scheduled to deliver two million shots in the next seven days, but shipped 1.4 million of those doses last week instead in anticipation of the May long weekend.

Pfizer and BioNTech have been consistently delivering doses even as other vaccine makers have struggled to keep their shipments flowing. They're set to increase their weekly deliveries to 2.4 million doses starting in June.

The federal government is not expecting any more doses of the Moderna vaccine before the end of May, and officials say they are still working on a timetable for when more doses will arrive in June.

Discussions are also taking place over the possible delivery of another 1 million Oxford-AstraZeneca shots by the end of June.

Meanwhile, Health Canada is still reviewing 300,000 vaccines from Johnson and Johnson. Those doses were delivered last month but have yet to be distributed because of concerns of possible tainting at a Baltimore production facility.

Canadian officials reported over the weekend that more than half of the population has received at least one vaccine dose.

MORE National ARTICLES

Care home staff shortage in COVID outbreak: report

Care home staff shortage in COVID outbreak: report
The Vancouver Coastal Health inspection report obtained by The Canadian Press through a freedom of information request says these two issues were rectified while the outbreak was underway in Little Mountain Place.

Care home staff shortage in COVID outbreak: report

B.C. law gives workers time off for vaccines

B.C. law gives workers time off for vaccines
Labour Minister Harry Bains says the safeguard will ensure that no one will lose their job if they need time away to get vaccinated.

B.C. law gives workers time off for vaccines

Meng case has 'overwhelming' U.S. connection: AG

Meng case has 'overwhelming' U.S. connection: AG
"The flaws in their argument run so wide and so deep, I scarcely know where to begin," Frater told the judge.

Meng case has 'overwhelming' U.S. connection: AG

Rural expansion for B.C. overdose supports

Rural expansion for B.C. overdose supports
More than $1 million in grants will be provided to 23 rural, remote and Indigenous communities where substance use services can be limited and the illicit drug overdose crisis is magnified.

Rural expansion for B.C. overdose supports

Stay-at-home order needed to control third wave, Ontario science advisers say

Stay-at-home order needed to control third wave, Ontario science advisers say
The projections were released just hours before Premier Doug Ford was expected to announce a four-week provincewide "shutdown."

Stay-at-home order needed to control third wave, Ontario science advisers say

Human Rights Code can't protect anti-maskers making unproven claims: tribunal

Human Rights Code can't protect anti-maskers making unproven claims: tribunal<p></p>
VANCOUVER - A decision by the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal says anyone denied service for refusing to wear a mask must be ready to prove they have a disability if they intend to file a complaint.

Human Rights Code can't protect anti-maskers making unproven claims: tribunal