Friday, April 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pfizer first planned February rollout in Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2021 06:16 PM
  • Pfizer first planned February rollout in Canada

The president of Pfizer Canada says when the company signed a purchase agreement last August it didn't expect its vaccine to get approved here until February.

Cole Pinnow also told the House of Commons health committee today that changes to the dosing schedule and conflicting advice could make more people vaccine hesitant.

On Aug. 1, Canada signed an agreement with Pfizer to buy at least 20 million doses, with the option to buy 56 million more, and approval was not expected until early 2021.

Health Canada ended up approving the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in December 2020.

Pinnow told the committee it was only in November that the federal government and Pfizer realized the approval could be imminent and began moving quickly to deliver doses to Canada months earlier than planned.

He also says the National Advisory Committee on Immunization did not contact Pfizer before it recommended changing delaying the second dose from three weeks to four months after the first shot.

MORE National ARTICLES

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures
The assessment comes in a new report in which Caroline Maynard takes the Mounties to task for failing to address long-standing issues in the handling of access-to-information requests.

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C
The system arrives at the same time as unusually high tides, raising the potential for flooding and prompting cities such as Courtenay and Delta to issue storm surge advisories or install portable flood barriers along low-lying areas.

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit
Three groups allege the department's Neighbourhood Response Unit will "intensify disproportionate and discriminatory policing" in some downtown neighbourhoods.  

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days
Dr. Bonnie Henry says they know that certain sections of the population are disproportionately targeted when fines are handed out, including those with disabilities, the homeless and racialized communities.

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days

Man charged in random stabbing attack

Man charged in random stabbing attack
Charges have been approved against Brent Courtney, 33, for assault causing bodily harm and assault with a weapon.

Man charged in random stabbing attack

Feds to usher in new privacy legislation

Feds to usher in new privacy legislation
The bill, to be tabled in the House of Commons on Tuesday, would be a step toward realizing commitments set out in the mandate letter of Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains.

Feds to usher in new privacy legislation