Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pfizer, Moderna vaccines now preferred second dose for AstraZeneca recipients: NACI

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2021 02:07 PM
  • Pfizer, Moderna vaccines now preferred second dose for AstraZeneca recipients: NACI

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization says it is now recommending people who got the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine first should get Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna for their second shot.

Previously, NACI had said AstraZeneca recipients could choose whether to get a second dose of the same vaccine, or an mRNA vaccine. But in new guidance released Thursday, NACI says Pfizer or Moderna are now "preferred" as the second dose.

The guidance is based on growing evidence that a second dose of an mRNA vaccine produces a stronger immune response, and because of the low but serious risk of vaccine-induced blood clots associated with getting AstraZeneca.

The advice doesn't mean people can't still choose AstraZeneca if they want, or if they are allergic to the mRNA vaccines.

"People who received two doses of AstraZeneca/COVISHIELD vaccine can rest assured that the vaccine provides good protection against infection and very good protection against severe disease and hospitalization," NACI's advice says.

As of June 5, 2.1 million Canadians had received one dose of AstraZeneca, and 15,186 had received two doses.

There are no further shipments of AstraZeneca scheduled, but there are still about half a million doses of it in provinces.

There are 14 million doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna being delivered this week and next, including a donation of one million doses of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine from the United States that arrived in Canada on Thursday.

The donated doses are part of an American promise to donate 80 million doses of vaccines by the end of June.

Jeff Zients, the White House COVID-19 response co-ordinator, said the shipment to Canada followed one to Mexico on Tuesday.

The donation won't cost Canada anything, and will be on top of the 44 million doses Canada has purchased directly from Moderna.

It comes less than a week after Canada promised to donate 13 million doses to the COVAX vaccine-sharing alliance, which will entirely come from the remaining share of doses Canada had purchased from COVAX itself.

Canada has been heavily criticized for buying three times as many doses of COVID-19 vaccine than it needs and not sharing any doses from its own direct purchase agreements with vaccine makers.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

New details on weapons in Rideau Hall crash

New details on weapons in Rideau Hall crash
The man charged with ramming a truck through a gate at Rideau Hall last week was armed with two shotguns, a rifle and a revolver, and threatened Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, police say.

New details on weapons in Rideau Hall crash

Rae appointed new Canadian ambassador to UN

Rae appointed new Canadian ambassador to UN
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has tapped Bob Rae as Canada's new ambassador to the United Nations.

Rae appointed new Canadian ambassador to UN

Hiring plans muted due to COVID-19: BoC

Hiring plans muted due to COVID-19: BoC
Companies that have laid off workers are telling the Bank of Canada they plan to refill some positions over the next year, but many hiring plans remain muted over COVID-19-related uncertainty.

Hiring plans muted due to COVID-19: BoC

Tories, NDP lay out demands ahead of snapshot

Tories, NDP lay out demands ahead of snapshot
Opposition parties have laid out their demands for the federal Liberal government as Ottawa prepares to update Canadians on the country's finances after four months of COVID-19 — and where it expects the economy to head for the rest of the year.

Tories, NDP lay out demands ahead of snapshot

Trudeau won't attend summit with U.S., Mexico

Trudeau won't attend summit with U.S., Mexico
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is taking a pass on a meeting this week with U.S. President Donald Trump and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Trudeau won't attend summit with U.S., Mexico

Lawsuit alleges illegal prison strip searches

Lawsuit alleges illegal prison strip searches
A proposed class-action lawsuit alleges authorities illegally strip searched Canadian federal prison inmates hundreds of thousands of times over almost three decades.

Lawsuit alleges illegal prison strip searches