From the CBC:
“Trudeau
turns to the military to help with COVID-19 vaccine distribution”
Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau today announced that the federal government has chosen a senior
military commander to lead its COVID-19 vaccine distribution effort as the
country prepares for a massive inoculation campaign. Trudeau said Maj.-Gen.
Dany Fortin, the current chief of staff to the Canadian Joint Operations
Command and a former commander of the NATO mission in Iraq, will head up
vaccine logistics and operations within a new branch of the Public Health
Agency of Canada (PHAC). Beyond his extensive overseas service, Fortin also was
involved in planning the CAF missions in pandemic-hit long-term care homes over
the summer. The harrowing reports the soldiers produced after working in those
homes caused the federal government to draft new directives on seniors' care.
Trudeau said
the government is creating a new military-supported hub within PHAC — the
National Operations Centre — to help coordinate the deployment of millions of
vaccine doses over the coming months. "Canada is well prepared for
large-scale rollouts of vaccines, but this will be the biggest immunization in
the history of the country. We must reach everyone who wants a vaccine, no
matter where they live," Trudeau said. Trudeau said the armed forces will
assist in planning for and tackling pressing challenges, such as the
cold-storage requirements for the promising Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. The
military also will help Ottawa get shots to some Indigenous and rural
communities where health care services are limited at the best of times. "This
will be a major effort but together, Canada can, and will, do this,"
Trudeau said. 3 million Canadians could be vaccinated in early 2021, but feds
warn of 'logistical challenges' Ontario Premier Doug Ford has also picked a
military leader — Gen. Rick Hillier, Canada's former top soldier and chief of
defence staff (CDS) — to lead similar vaccine efforts in the province.
While the
federal government is procuring the drug, it will be up to the provinces and
territories to get shots into the arms of Canadians. Hillier said that, despite
massive uncertainties about possible delivery times, he's aiming to have some
sort of distribution structure in place by Dec. 31. Hillier said Fortin's
appointment is a welcome development because the general has the know-how to
execute a complicated rollout. "He is the most incredible leader. I could
not praise him enough. I'm so absolutely delighted he's commanding the task
force. We're blessed as a nation to have him" Hillier said, praising
Fortin's efforts in the war in the Afghanistan. The U.S. tapped a retired four
star general, Gen. Gustave Perna, in May to lead Operation Warp Speed — a
project to develop a vaccine, manufacture it in large quantities and push it
out into communities. The U.S. armed forces, working with pharmaceutical distribution
giant McKesson and shippers like FedEx, will distribute millions of Pfizer
vaccines doses to all 50 U.S. states the day after that product gets the
necessary approvals from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which is
expected to happen on Dec. 10. As many as 20 million Americans are expected to
be vaccinated in December, with 30 million more Americans being vaccinated in
every subsequent month.
Majority of
Canadians to be vaccinated by September: Trudeau The government has been
criticized by the opposition, provincial leaders and some public health experts
for offering few details about its plans to roll out a vaccine once Health
Canada gives one the green light. The government also has had to grapple
with the fact that Canada seems to be falling behind other developed countries
on vaccine delivery timelines. When asked why he didn't appoint a
military liaison earlier, when the U.S. has had one in place for months,
Trudeau said his government is doing "its very best" and work on the
distribution plan has been ongoing for some time. "I can understand
the eagerness with which people want to know when this will be over, when we're
going to get vaccines. What we can say is we're going to work extremely hard to
deliver as quickly and as safely as possible," Trudeau said. "We're
on this and we're delivering." Trudeau said Canada is on track to
vaccinate nearly every person that wants a shot by September 2021. Health
Canada is expected to give approvals to the Pfizer product at roughly the same
time the United States does. "We're on track to make decisions on similar
timelines," said Dr. Supriya Sharma, the chief medical adviser at Health
Canada. Sharma said her department has been reviewing clinical trial
data on a rolling basis since October 9. The rolling review process — a policy
shift implemented because of the urgency of this pandemic — allows drug makers
to bypass the lengthy timelines they normally face when launching a new
vaccine. Canada is largely beholden to Pfizer manufacturing plants in
the U.S. and abroad for its supply of the vaccine because our country doesn't
have the capacity to produce it. The vaccine uses groundbreaking messenger RNA
technology, or mRNA, which essentially directs cells in the body to make
proteins to prevent or fight disease. The federal government didn't
secure domestic manufacturing rights for the AstraZeneca product, which was
co-developed by scientists at Oxford University. That vaccine, which uses a
more traditional vaccination platform, is easier to produce. Other
countries — including Western nations like Germany, France and Italy and
middle-income countries like Mexico and Argentina — will produce the vaccine
domestically. Public Services and Procurement Minister Anita Anand, a
former contract law professor, said her department is in daily contact with
Pfizer and the six other drug companies with which the government signed
agreements for vaccines. "I will personally make sure we have
vaccines in place in Canada once Health Canada has provided its regulatory
approval," Anand told reporters at a COVID-19 briefing. "Once
we have Health Canada approvals, deliveries will start as soon as
possible," she said. Arianne Reza, an assistant deputy minister at
Public Services and Procurement Canada, said she expects vaccines will be
available in the "first quarter of 2021." "The minute
regulatory approval comes through, they will be ready to go quite quickly with
supply and initial shipments," she said. If all goes well, and if
U.S. pharmaceutical giants are able to meet delivery timelines, PHAC has said
as many as six million doses could be deployed in the first three months of
2021. Each patient will need two doses of Pfizer's vaccine. All told,
Canada has secured options for 414 million doses of the various vaccines under
development.
^ As with most
things the Canadian Federal Government has been behind (in creating their own
Covid-19 Vaccine, in acquiring a Covid-19 Vaccine from other countries, from
creating a country-wide plan to distribute the Clovid-19 Vaccine, etc.) I’m not
sure what Trudeau and the Liberals were doing for months while the rest of the
world prepared, but they clearly weren’t focusing on the health and safety of
Canadians. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-vaccine-distribution-military-1.5819248
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