From the CBC:
“Canada
falls to 20th in the world for vaccine doses administered”
Canada has
fallen behind other developed nations in the number of shots administered per
capita as supply disruptions derail planned vaccinations. According to data
collated by the University of Oxford-based Our World in Data, Canada now ranks
20th globally, well behind allies like the United States and the United Kingdom
but also middle-income countries like Poland and Serbia. Canada's vaccination
effort has also been outpaced so far by those in Bahrain, Denmark, Germany,
Israel, Italy, Malta, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Spain and the United Arab
Emirates, among others. While a laggard compared to many other wealthy nations,
Canada has administered more shots per capita than G7 partners like France and
Japan. Japan, with a population of 126 million people and just 5,400
COVID-19-related deaths, hasn't yet started its vaccination campaign. Unlike
Canada, Japan is planning to produce 90 million shots of the AstraZeneca
vaccine domestically. Some observers have blamed France's
"technocratic" system with its maze of red tape — a patient needs to
consult with a doctor before they get a shot — for the slow rollout there. While
the U.S. is grappling with distribution issues of its own — the press there has
said President Joe Biden is "inheriting a complete disaster," and an
"absolute mess" from the last administration — the Americans have so
far vaccinated 24.5 million people with at least one dose.
Even when
accounting for population size, the U.S. has vaccinated 3 times more people per
capita than Canada. The CBC's vaccine tracker estimates just over 900,000 doses
have been administered in Canada to this point. The U.S., with a population
roughly nine times bigger than Canada, has fully vaccinated 3.8 million
Americans with the two-dose regime of either the Pfizer or Moderna products,
compared to about 150,000 people in Canada. The U.K., a world leader so far,
has administered at least one dose to 11.3 per cent of its people, nearly five
times more per capita than Canada. That country's vaccination efforts have been
helped by an early approval of the product from Swedish-British pharmaceutical
giant AstraZeneca. Health Canada regulators are still reviewing the company's
promising vaccine for safety and efficacy.
Canada was
among one of the first countries in the world to authorize the Pfizer and
Moderna vaccines for use but other nations have since caught up, as Canada
contends with shortages because of a plant shutdown in Belgium. Pfizer is
making upgrades to its Belgian plant so it can manufacture up to two billion
doses this year to meet the insatiable demand. In order to complete those
upgrades, some production lines were idled and Pfizer didn't have enough vials
to go around in the short term to meet its previously promised delivery
schedule. A Belgian newspaper reported Thursday those upgrades are now
complete, but a spokesperson for Pfizer confirmed Canada's deliveries won't
return to a more normal level until next month. "We expect the supply
constraints of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to last in Canada until
mid-February when we will be able to increase allocations to catch up,"
the spokesperson said. "While the precise percentage allocation may
fluctuate, Pfizer Canada remains on track to meet our quarterly delivery
objectives to Canada by the end of the first quarter of 2021."
Confusion
over first quarter deliveries While the delivery schedules may fluctuate,
the government insists its medium-term targets are more certain. However,
a government planning document released to the provinces Wednesday caused
confusion as the delivery charts indicate Canada would only receive 3.5 million
Pfizer doses by the end of March, 500,000 less than anticipated. The
confusion stems from just how many doses are included in each vial shipped.
Amid manufacturing delays, Pfizer is pushing the government to recognize that
six doses can be extracted from each vial, but the current Health Canada standard
is only five. Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada's deputy chief public health
officer, said Health Canada is still reviewing the request to formally change
the label and is examining whether that sixth dose can be extracted
consistently. Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin, the military commander leading
vaccine logistics at the Public Health Agency of Canada, insisted Thursday
that, regardless of how many are in each vial, Pfizer is still contractually
obligated to send 4 million doses to Canada in the first quarter of this year.
He said the 3.5 million figure floated to the provinces was just for
"planning purposes" in the interim, and the country will still hold
Pfizer to its previous commitments. Fortin said the pharmaceutical giant
has assured Canada that it will reach 4 million doses delivered, no matter
which vial standard is recognized. If Health Canada accepts that six doses can
be extracted from each vial, Pfizer will send more product to cover any gaps,
Fortin said. Fortin said that Canada is expecting 79,000 Pfizer doses
next week, 70,000 doses for the week of Feb. 8, 335,000 the week of Feb. 15 and
395,000 doses the week of Feb. 22. Moderna will deliver 230,400 doses next week
with 249,600 doses to follow three weeks later. Thus, Canada is expected
to receive 1,359,000 doses in the month of February, enough to vaccinate
679,500 people.
The opposition
Conservatives have been pressing the government on why Canada has been bested
by small countries like the Seychelles on vaccinations so far. "That is
not normal for a country that claims to have the best vaccine portfolio in the
world," Conservative MP Pierre Paul-Hus said in the Commons. The
government has said it still expects hundreds of thousands of doses to flow in
the months ahead. "This is a completely temporary situation, as we are
working hard to ensure that every Canadian who wants a vaccine gets one,"
Public Services and Procurement Minister Anita Anand said. Under questioning
from the opposition, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said "there
is no more urgent issue for this government than getting Canadians
vaccinated." She reminded MPs that Canada has vaccinated more people than
our Five Eyes partners of Australia and New Zealand. Those two countries
haven't yet begun their vaccination programs but COVID-19 is almost
non-existent there.
^ Canada has
not done enough to vaccinate Canadians regardless of all the excuses Trudeau
and his Government tries to make. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-20-world-vaccine-doses-administered-1.5891465
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