Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Review underway after doctors jump vaccine queue

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2021 11:22 PM
  • Review underway after doctors jump vaccine queue

British Columbia's health minister says it's "very disappointing" that some doctors in Vancouver jumped the queue to get a second dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Adrian Dix says the issue was detected through a systems review and that everyone is expected to follow the rules on the priority list for immunization in order to first protect the most vulnerable people.

He says a number of cases have been identified by Vancouver Coastal Health and "appropriate action" will be taken as part of a review that is underway.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says reports of administrative staff getting the vaccine in another health authority may have involved clinics calling people on a list to use up doses that would otherwise have gone to waste.

Dix says the broader segment of the population, beyond those who are most vulnerable, can expect to be immunized as of April when B.C. is scheduled to get about 2.6 million doses of vaccine.

He says six million more doses could be delivered between July and September, but that doesn't include supplies from the federal government's announcement of an order of another 20 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebecois 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' faces backlash

Quebecois 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' faces backlash
Quebec's French-language adaptation of the popular American police comedy, "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," is already taking heat before the first episode airs — from one of the actors in the original series.

Quebecois 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' faces backlash

Lawsuit filed in Icefield bus crash

Lawsuit filed in Icefield bus crash
A class-action lawsuit alleging the defendants acted recklessly and unreasonably has been filed against the operators of a tour bus involved in a fatal rollover at Jasper National Park's Columbia Icefield.

Lawsuit filed in Icefield bus crash

Trudeau Liberals come out ahead in new survey

Trudeau Liberals come out ahead in new survey
 A new poll suggests Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would be well placed to fight an election this fall, seen as the leader best able to care for Canadians during the COVID-19 pandemic and to get the economy back on its feet.

Trudeau Liberals come out ahead in new survey

Doctors want health care as top election issue

Doctors want health care as top election issue
The New Brunswick Medical Society is calling on political parties to make health care the top priority of the provincial election campaign.

Doctors want health care as top election issue

O'Toole pledges to fight for middle class

O'Toole pledges to fight for middle class
Newly elected Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole said Tuesday that as leader, and as a prime minister, he will stand up for the rights of women and the LGBTQ community, and he intends to apply that fighting spirit to all his files.

O'Toole pledges to fight for middle class

B.C. records 175 overdose deaths in July

B.C. records 175 overdose deaths in July
British Columbia's chief coroner says 175 people fatally overdosed in July, matching the same total in June as access to harm-reduction services such as a safer supply of drugs remains a challenge.

B.C. records 175 overdose deaths in July