Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Second dose choice likely for AstraZeneca: Tam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2021 12:52 PM
  • Second dose choice likely for AstraZeneca: Tam

Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam says she expects Canadians who got Oxford-AstraZeneca in the first round of vaccinations will be able to choose which vaccine they get for their second dose.

Tam's comments Tuesday come hours after a small Spanish study on mixing and matching vaccines reported that giving a Pfizer-BioNTech for the second dose after AstraZeneca is safe and produced a stronger immune response than a second dose of AstraZeneca.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization is still awaiting further data from another mixing and matching study underway in the United Kingdom, but Tam said advice on second doses should be ready before most people are due to get their second vaccination.

"It is likely that people in Canada who've received one dose of AstraZeneca will have a choice for their second dose," she said at a news conference from Ottawa.

Also on Tuesday, Canada reached the grim milestone of 25,000 total deaths from COVID-19 since the first fatality was reported on March 9, 2020.

The country surpassed 20,000 deaths at the end of January.

Tam said she is feeling positive about Canada being able to fully emerge from the third wave of COVID-19 and prevent a fourth wave, with more than half of eligible Canadian adults now vaccinated with one dose, and declining overall case counts.

With the exception of some hot spots in Manitoba and parts of Alberta, case counts are largely falling. Tam said nationally the number of active cases are down 25 per cent from the second wave of peak of nearly 90,000 in mid-April.

The average daily new case count fell from 7,275 on May 11 to 5,600 Tuesday, said Tam, although hospitalizations and intensive care admissions remain stubbornly above a comfortable level.

More than six people in 10,000 have died of COVID-19 in Canada, and the toll has been heaviest on seniors. More than eight in 10 people who died were over the age of 70, and almost three in five were residents of long-term care homes.

Canada ranks 64th globally for the COVID-19 death toll. Hungary, with 30 deaths for every 10,000 people, has the highest death rate. The United Kingdom has recorded 18 deaths for every 10,000 people, while the United States recorded 17.

Ontario reported just 1,616 cases Tuesday, the lowest since late March, and also reported 17 new deaths.

Quebec, reporting 549 new cases, is among the first provinces really looking ahead to lifting public health restrictions. Premier Francois Legault is set to announce how the province's reopening will work later this afternoon.

Tam said the number one influence on ending the third wave and preventing a fourth is still how well public health measures are planned and implemented.

She has said if 75 per cent of eligible Canadians get one dose, and 20 per cent get two, that should be a place where summer plans for outdoor socializing and activities can resume.

Currently Canadians over 12 are eligible for vaccinations, with those between 12 and 18 only eligible for Pfizer.

Only 4.5 per cent of eligible Canadians have received the second dose so far and most provinces are still giving more than nine in 10 new doses to first-time recipients.

Many provinces delayed second doses up to 16 weeks, instead of the company-suggested three and four week intervals. But with more supplies flowing, that delay is going to be reduced.

For the 2.1 million Canadians who got AstraZeneca in the first round, it's still unknown what they will get as their second dose.

The Combivacs study run by the Carlos III Health Institute in Spain said fewer than two per cent of more than 450 people who got the AstraZeneca-Pfizer combination reported severe side-effects including headaches and muscle pain, leading the study authors to conclude mixing the doses was safe.

People who got the second dose of Pfizer also appeared to have twice the immune response as those whose second dose was also AstraZeneca.

Tam said that study is being analyzed closely, and another similar study from the United Kingdom is expected to report efficacy data in the next few weeks.

Most provinces have temporarily halted using AstraZeneca for any more first doses with supplies of it currently limited and as further data emerges on the risk of vaccine-induced blood clots in patients who got that vaccine.

Canada has given at least one dose to about 55 per cent of eligible people, and has to vaccinate almost 6.5 million more to get to that 75 per cent figure. Quebec however reported Tuesday that it has either vaccinated or booked appointments for 75 per cent of eligible people.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa Police Investigate Egging Of Holocaust Monument As A Hate Crime

OTTAWA - Police in Ottawa are looking for a man believed to have thrown eggs at the National Holocaust Monument.

Ottawa Police Investigate Egging Of Holocaust Monument As A Hate Crime

No Need To Change Canada's Plans After Who Declares Global Emergency: Officials

No Need To Change Canada's Plans After Who Declares Global Emergency: Officials
Canada is already taking the right steps to control the spread of the novel coronavirus, so there is no need to change things now that the World Health Organization

No Need To Change Canada's Plans After Who Declares Global Emergency: Officials

Ukraine Airlines CEO Thanks Canada For Help Investigating Tehran Crash

OTTAWA - The head of Ukraine International Airlines is thanking Canada for its part in investigating the crash of one of its planes outside Tehran in early January.    

Ukraine Airlines CEO Thanks Canada For Help Investigating Tehran Crash

Canada Lags Behind Peers In Doctors Per Capita, But Average In Physician Visits

Canada Lags Behind Peers In Doctors Per Capita, But Average In Physician Visits
TORONTO - Canada lags well behind all but the United States among 11 of the wealthiest nations when it comes to the number of doctors per capita, a new report indicates.    

Canada Lags Behind Peers In Doctors Per Capita, But Average In Physician Visits

Hateful Messages Flood Quebec Premier's Facebook Page After He Supports Muslims

ST-SAUVEUR, Que. - Quebec cabinet ministers are speaking out about a deluge of hateful comments posted to the premier's Facebook page after he published a message in support of the province's Muslim community.    

Hateful Messages Flood Quebec Premier's Facebook Page After He Supports Muslims

Bats A Breeding Ground For Viruses, But Unlikely Cause For Concern In Canada

Bats A Breeding Ground For Viruses, But Unlikely Cause For Concern In Canada
SASKATOON - Canadian bats are unlikely to be the source of virus strains that can infect humans such as the one currently raising global alarms, a bat expert says.

Bats A Breeding Ground For Viruses, But Unlikely Cause For Concern In Canada