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Senin, 31 Mei 2021

B.C.'s third case of rare COVID vaccine-related blood clot reported in Island Health - Times Colonist

A case of a rare vaccine-induced blood clot — the province’s third — has been reported in Island Health.

The man, who in his 30s, is receiving treatment and recovering in hospital, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Monday.

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The province’s first case of vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia, or VITT, was reported on May 6 in a woman in her 40s in Vancouver Coastal Health after she received her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine made by AstraZeneca. She was recovering in hospital.

A second case was announced May 14, when a man in his 40s in Fraser Health was being treated for the condition.

If adverse events occur, it is usually four to 28 days after vaccination.

On Monday, the province reported 708 new cases of COVID-19 over three days — 258 on Saturday, 238 on Sunday and 212 on Monday. That includes 18 people in Island Health, 140 in Vancouver Coastal, 394 in Fraser Health, 113 in Interior Health, and 42 in Northern Health.

There are now 2,953 active cases in the province. Of those, 249 are in hospital, including 78 in intensive or critical care. Another 11 deaths were reported: one person in their 40s, two in their 60s, six in their 70s, and two over age 80.

Henry cautioned while the province is making significant headway vaccinating people and case counts and hospitalizations are decreasing, new strains of the virus are circulating and outbreaks are still occurring. Anyone who may have contracted the virus over the long weekend could be starting to see symptoms now.

“We have seen a few new outbreaks in these recent days, and we all need to take our precautions to prevent more,” she said.

There are six active outbreaks in long-term care and assisted living and one in acute care.

Henry said easing of restrictions at long-term care homes will happen slowly. Even with most people vaccinated, there has been rapid transmission of highly spreadable variants, and not all residents and visitors have received their second doses, she said.

“We are not at a place yet where we can take off those restrictions in long-term care homes,” she said, noting masks will be required for the next few months. “We’re looking at least to July, then we can see where we are in terms of transmission in our community.”

Henry said 3.2 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., with 69 per cent of the adult population vaccinated, and more than half of eligible youth ages 12 to 17 have booked an appointment.

Henry, who stressed the need for people to get their second doses, said details of the province’s approach for second doses for those who have received the AstraZeneca vaccine will come Thursday.

The province of Manitoba has said people who received the AstraZeneca vaccine as a first dose can mix and match for the second, opting to receive the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine instead of AstraZeneca.

Study results B.C. has been waiting for out of the United Kingdom have been delayed, though Henry said the province is reviewing other data. It is also working out the presentation of risk-benefit data and operational logistics of providing the second doses.

ceharnett@timescolonist.com

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B.C.'s third case of rare COVID vaccine-related blood clot reported in Island Health - Times Colonist
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Health officials in New Brunswick report a dozen new cases of COVID-19 - CTV News Atlantic

FREDERICTON -- New Brunswick is reporting 12 new cases of COVID-19 today.

Health officials say the new cases involve five people in the Moncton region, five in the Fredericton area and two in the Bathurst region.

New Brunswick has 146 active reported cases of COVID-19 and six patients in hospital with the disease. One New Brunswicker is hospitalized with COVID-19 outside the province.

Officials say 62.6 per cent of all New Brunswickers aged 12 and older have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.

Health Canada extended the expiry date of tens of thousands of Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine doses by one month on Saturday. That decision extends the use of AstraZeneca vaccines doses in New Brunswick, which were set to expire on May 31 but will now be used until July 1.

Of the 61,500 doses of AstraZeneca vaccines received in New Brunswick, 43,362 have been administered as first doses and 651 as booster shots.

EXPOSURE NOTIFICATIONS

Public Health has identified a potential public exposure to the virus at the following location and date in Zone 1 (Moncton region):

  • DJ Marine, 3107 Route 117, Pointe-Sapin;
  • Tuesday, May 25, Wednesday, May 26, Thursday, May 27 and Friday, May 28.

Public Health has identified a potential public exposure to the virus at the following locations and dates in Zone 3 (Fredericton region):

  • Terry LeClair Auto Body Towing, 4818 Route 105, Nackawic;
  • Thursday, May 13 to Friday, May 28.
  • Kent Building Supplies, 809 Bishop Dr., Fredericton;
  • Sunday, May 23 between noon and 5 p.m.
  • Lincoln Big Stop, 415 Nevers Rd., Waasis;
  • Wednesday, May 26, between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.
  • Irving, 1769 Lincoln Rd., Fredericton;
  • Wednesday, May 26, between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.
  • Sobeys, 375 Miramichi Rd., Oromocto;
  • Friday, May 28, between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.
  • Canadian Tire, 345 Miramichi Rd., Oromocto;
  • Friday, May 28, between 10 a.m. and noon.

Public Health offers COVID-19 testing for New Brunswickers who have been in a public exposure area, even if they are not experiencing symptoms. Residents may request a test online or call Tele-Care 811 to get an appointment at the nearest screening centre.

People experiencing one or more symptoms are also encouraged to get tested.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 31, 2021.

- With files from CTV Atlantic

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Health officials in New Brunswick report a dozen new cases of COVID-19 - CTV News Atlantic
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Ontario's daily COVID cases drop below 1,000 - Toronto Sun

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Ontario reported fewer than 1,000 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday — the lowest daily number since Feb. 17.

Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams, who confirmed he is retiring as of June 25, said the province is still in the third wave of the pandemic but the numbers are coming down.

“These are encouraging trends,” he said Monday.

Health Minister Christine Elliott tweeted, “Ontario is reporting 916 cases of #COVID19 and over 18,200 tests completed. Locally, there are 226 new cases in Toronto, 165 in Peel, 85 in York Region, 67 in Durham and 52 in Hamilton.”

The finds were based on 18,226 tests.

Thirteen more deaths were attributed to COVID-19 Monday, bringing the number of lives lost to the pandemic to 8,757.

The province’s hospitals reported 731 patients being treated for COVID-19, with 617 in intensive care and 382 on ventilators.

While Monday’s data on hospitalizations can be underreported due to the weekend, the numbers are following a generally positive trend.

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Ontario's daily COVID cases drop below 1,000 - Toronto Sun
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Canada won't rush reopening border with United States, Trudeau says - CTV News

MONTREAL -- Canada won't be rushed into reopening its border with the United States to non-essential travel, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday as new COVID-19 case counts continued to drop in much of the country.

Calls for a reopening plan have started to intensify as vaccine coverage has increased on both sides of the border. The White House said last week it had not decided when or how to reopen the border with Canada, but business groups and lawmakers including Vermont Gov. Phil Scott and New York Rep. Brian Higgins have urged both countries to come up with a plan.

Trudeau said Monday that while many people are eager to see the border reopen, any easing of restrictions needs to be done carefully and with Canadians' safety in mind.

"We're on the right path, but we'll make our decisions based on the interests of Canadians and not based on what other countries want," he told a news conference in Ottawa.

Trudeau suggested 75 per cent of Canadians need to be vaccinated and daily cases need to continue to decline across the country before his government would be willing to ease travel restrictions.

"We all want to reopen, we all want to go back to travelling to see friends, take vacations, go on trips," he said. "But we don't want to have to close again, tighten up again because there's another wave."

The land border has been closed to non-essential travel since March 2020, and the measure was recently extended until June 21.

Trudeau's words came as Ontario and Quebec reported their lowest numbers of new COVID-19 infections in months. Quebec reported fewer than 300 new COVID-19 cases for the first time since mid-September, with 276 new infections and one more death attributed to the novel coronavirus.

Several regions in Quebec were downgraded to orange from red on the province's pandemic-alert system, allowing high school students to return full time to in-person classes and gyms and indoor restaurant dining to reopen.

Ontario reported 916 new cases of COVID-19, which is its lowest daily total since February. The last time that province reported fewer cases was on Feb. 17, with 847 new infections.

Many Ontarians aged 80 and up became eligible Monday to move up their second doses of COVID-19 vaccine after the government said last week it would shorten the minimum interval between shots to four weeks. Some health units, however, said they wouldn't be able to immediately offer earlier second doses due to supply challenges.

Meanwhile, Nunavut's chief public health officer said Monday that the territory will ease restrictions in Iqaluit later this week thanks to falling cases and high vaccine uptake.

The decision means schools can reopen for part-time in-class learning and people can gather in groups of five indoors and groups of 25 outdoors.

And case counts also continued their downward trend in Nova Scotia, which reported 17 new infections, while Saskatchewan reported its lowest number of COVID-19 hospitalizations since late November, with 108.

Manitoba announced it has approved administering Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines as booster shots for residents who got Oxford-AstraZeneca for their first dose. Dr. Joss Reimer, who is leading the province's vaccine rollout, said the decision was made following the results of a study from Spain and after similar decisions had been made in Quebec and elsewhere.

In contrast to some other provinces, Manitoba has continued to struggle with high COVID-19 infection rates. The province reported more than 300 new infections on Monday and Dr. Brent Roussin, the chief provincial public health officer, said there were still too many people in intensive care, which he said was putting pressure on the health system.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 31, 2021.

--

With files from Holly McKenzie-Sutter, Emma Tranter and Kelly Geraldine Malone

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Canada won't rush reopening border with United States, Trudeau says - CTV News
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Today's coronavirus news: Ontario reporting 916 COVID-19 cases and 13 deaths; 550 vaccinated frontline health-care workers invited to attend Game 7 of the Leafs-Canadiens series - Toronto Star

The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Monday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

5:05 p.m. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s office says she will travel to a meeting this week of G7 finance ministers in the U.K.

Freeland’s office said the two-day meeting in London starting June 4 is an “in-person-only” event. Freeland and the delegation with her “will follow strict public health protocols” while travelling to and from the meeting, as well as while at the summit itself, the office said in a news release.

It adds that Freeland and her team will quarantine as required upon their return to Canada, including staying in a government-authorized hotel.

The G7 meeting is expected to focus on building an economic recovery from COVID-19, and a U.S. proposal for a global, minimum corporate tax rate.

4:55 p.m. Workers who have returned to Ontario from the Mary River mine in Nunavut are being asked to isolate and seek testing for COVID-19.

The mine is dealing with an outbreak driven by a variant of the virus.

Dr. Barbara Yaffe, associate medical officer of health for Ontario, says approximately 300 workers live in Ontario and all are considered high-risk.

She says workers have returned to 33 of the 34 health units in the province and the local health units are following up with them.

4:30 p.m. Vancouver Coastal Health is apologizing and says it’s updating its immunization processes after confirming a dozen incidents in which youth were given the wrong COVID-19 vaccine.

The health authority says the errors happened Friday and Saturday during the first full week that kids aged 12 to 17 could get their first dose.

It says in a statement that 12 youth received doses of Moderna rather than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which is the only COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in those between 12 and 17 in Canada.

It says Moderna recently announced that clinical trials for adolescents found its vaccine to be safe and effective, but its use for people under 18 has yet to be approved in Canada.

The statement says Vancouver Coastal Health medical officers do not believe the use of Moderna will impact the 12 youth who received the shot.

3:45 p.m. Quebec’s higher education minister, Danielle McCann, is calling for universities and junior colleges in the province to prepare for a return to in-person classes in the fall.

McCann says physical distancing measures will not apply in universities and colleges come the fall semester, although she says other measures, such as mask-wearing, may still be required.

She says a full return to in-person classes will depend on whether 75 per cent of Quebec residents 16 to 29 years old are fully vaccinated and on the epidemiological situation at the time.

McCann says extracurricular activities and sports for students will remain subject to the same rules as the general public.

3:35 p.m. Saskatchewan is reporting 113 new cases of COVID-19 today.

A person in the 80+ age group living in Saskatoon has died.

There were 174 more recoveries, leaving the province with 1,368 active cases.

The province also reported 108 people in hospital, the lowest number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in the province since Nov. 28, 2020.

Twenty-five of those patients are in intensive care.

Saskatchewan began the first step in its reopening road map on Sunday.

This step lifts some restrictions on gathering sizes, outdoor sports and restaurants and bars.

2:55 p.m. Nunavut is reporting nine active cases of COVID-19 and no new cases today.

The territory’s chief public health officer says Iqaluit, where a COVID-19 outbreak has been ongoing since mid-April, can start to reopen on Thursday.

Starting then, all schools can reopen for part-time in-class learning and people can gather indoors in groups of five.

Workplaces can also reopen with mandatory mask-wearing.

Nunavut also announced Monday that it would start offering the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to youth ages 12 to 17 on June 15.

2:45 p.m. Prince Edward Island is reporting two new cases of COVID-19 today.

Health officials say the new cases involve a person in their 40s and another in their 50s, both of whom recently travelled outside Atlantic Canada.

Prince Edward Island has 10 active reported cases of COVID-19. The province has reported a total of 204 infections and no deaths linked to the virus.

2:05 p.m. Manitoba health officials say there are 303 new cases of COVID-19 and one more death.

The province has continued to see a significant surge of infections and Dr. Brent Roussin, the chief provincial public health officer, says there are too many people landing in intensive care.

There are 308 people in hospital and 71 intensive-care patients in Manitoba, as well as 36 more who have been transferred out of province for care.

2:14 p.m. Ontario sets vaccination policy for nursing homes, says workers must present proof of vaccination, a “documented medical reason for not being vaccinated” or attend a program on the risks of not being vaccinated.

1:50 p.m. New Brunswick is reporting 12 new cases of COVID-19 Monday.

Health officials say the new cases involve five people in the Moncton region, five in the Fredericton area and two in the Bathurst region.

New Brunswick has 146 active reported cases of COVID-19 and six patients in hospital with the disease. One New Brunswicker is hospitalized with COVID-19 outside the province.

Officials say 62.6 per cent of all New Brunswickers aged 12 and older have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.

Health Canada extended the expiry date of tens of thousands of Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine doses by one month on Saturday. That decision extends the use of AstraZeneca vaccines doses in New Brunswick, which were set to expire on May 31 but will now be used until July 1.

Of the 61,500 doses of AstraZeneca vaccines received in New Brunswick, 43,362 have been administered as first doses and 651 as booster shots.

1:45 p.m. The WHO says new variants will be given a name from the Greek alphabet. Variants won’t be recognized with the name of any country.

The labels will not replace existing scientific names, but are aimed to help in public discussion of variant of concern and variant of interest VOI/VOC, the WHO says.

Under the new naming, B.1.1.7, the variant first identified in the U.K. will be known as Alpha and B.1.351, the variant first reconized in South Africa, will be Beta.

P.1, the variant first detected in Brazil, will be Gamma and B.1.671.2, the variant first found in India is Delta.

1:25 p.m. Nova Scotia is reporting 17 new cases of COVID-19 Monday.

Health officials say all of the new cases have been identified in the Halifax area, where there is limited community spread of the virus.

The province has 448 known active infections, with 40 people in hospital, including 16 in intensive care.

As of Sunday, 583,873 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered, with 43,463 people having received their booster shot.

1:19 p.m. Newfoundland and Labrador is reporting two new confirmed cases of COVID-19 Monday.

One case involves a woman in her 50s in the central health region who is a contact of a previous case.

The second case involves a woman in her 50s in the western region and is linked to international travel.

The province has 101 known active cases of the infection and two people are currently in hospital.

1:07 p.m. Premier Ford says he looked at all the responses regarding school re-openings over the weekend and will make an announcement “in the next day or two.”

1 p.m. Ontario and Quebec are reporting their lowest numbers of new COVID-19 cases in months.

Quebec is reporting fewer than 300 new COVID-19 cases today for the first time since mid-September, with 276 new infections and one more death attributed to the novel coronavirus.

Several regions in Quebec were downgraded to orange from red on the province’s pandemic-alert system, allowing high school students to return to in-person classes full-time and gyms and indoor restaurant dining to reopen.

Ontario is reporting 916 new cases of COVID-19 today, which is its lowest daily total since February.

The last time that province reported fewer cases was on Feb. 17, with 847 new infections.

Nunavut’s chief public health officer is announcing that the territory will ease restrictions in hard-hit Iqaluit later this week thanks to falling cases and high vaccine uptake.

11:22 a.m. Quebec is reporting 276 new cases of COVID-19 Monday and one more death attributed to the novel coronavirus.

Health officials say hospitalizations dropped by two, to 362, and 89 people were in intensive care, a drop of one.

The province says 77,495 doses of vaccine were administered Sunday, for a total of 5,583,075; about 60.8 per cent of Quebecers have received at least one dose of vaccine.

Restrictions were eased today in eight Quebec regions that had been at the province’s highest pandemic-alert level.

The cities of Montreal and Laval are now the only regions at the red alert level.

10 a.m. (updated) Ontario is reporting another 916 COVID-19 cases and 13 more deaths, according to its latest report released Monday morning.

Ontario has administered 97,747 vaccine doses since its last daily update, with 9,082,025 vaccines given in total as of 8 p.m. the previous night.

According to the Star’s vaccine tracker, 8,375,193 people in Ontario have received at least one shot. That works out to approximately 56.8 per cent of the total population and the equivalent of 70.4 per cent of the adult population.

The province says 706,832 people have completed their vaccinations, which means they’ve had both doses. That works out to approximately 4.8 per cent of the total population and the equivalent of 5.9 per cent of the adult population.

The number of people vaccinated in Ontario includes a relatively small number of 12-17 year olds.

Read the full story from the Star’s Rhythm Sachdeva

9:25 a.m. (updated) A day after saying no to allowing a limited number of fans at Monday night’s Game 7 playoff showdown between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens, Premier Doug Ford said public health officials have given clearance for 550 fully vaccinated health care workers at Scotiabank Arena.

Ford said it’s a “small token of appreciation” for the “heroic sacrifices” of health care workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, putting their lives and safety on the line to help others.

Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment is covering the cost of the tickets and providing jerseys to each of the health care workers — hoping, of course, they will all cheer for the home team which gave up a 3-1 lead in the series after losing the last two games in overtime.

Read the full story from the Star’s Rob Ferguson

8:40 a.m. The leaders of New Zealand and Australia downplayed their differences over China and urged more investigation into the origin of the coronavirus Monday after their first face-to-face meeting in more than a year.

The two leaders also indicated an Australian-born mass murderer would remain imprisoned in New Zealand.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison met with his New Zealand counterpart, Jacinda Ardern, in the tourist resort of Queenstown. Morrison was the first major world leader to visit New Zealand since both countries closed their borders last year to keep out the virus.

Australia has taken a hard stance against China in recent years and the relationship between the nations has deteriorated. New Zealand has opted for a more diplomatic approach at times, which some say is too soft.

But Morrison said he and Ardern had similar philosophies.

“Australia and New Zealand are trading nations,” Morrison said. “But neither of us would ever trade our sovereignty or trade our values. We have stood side-by-side to defend and protect and promote these values. Not just on the beaches of Gallipoli but in Afghanistan and so many other places around the world.”

Ardern said New Zealand maintained a strong and principled stance toward China on human rights and trade, and its positions were very similar to Australia’s.

She said New Zealand remains a committed member of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance with Australia, the U.S., Britain and Canada.

“That is not in question, not in doubt,” she said.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said the two leaders had made “irresponsible remarks” about China’s internal affairs concerning Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and the South China Sea, which China claims virtually in its entirety.

8:24 a.m. Hamilton’s COVID-19 cases continued to drop over the weekend even as the city reported more deaths and cases of new variants.

Two deaths were reported on Sunday, one of a person in their 60s and another in their 40s. The city now has 386 deaths. The death of a person in their 60s was reported on Saturday.

Last week, public health reported two deaths of people under 60. To date, two residents in their 30s have died, three in their 40s and eight in their 50s. Forty-six people in their 60s have died. The majority of deaths occurred in residents 80 years and older, at 252.

Public health reported 56 new cases on Sunday, down from the 71 on Saturday. The seven-day average of daily new cases dropped to 61 from 67. The number of active cases decreased to 601 from 637. There were 560 active cases on Sunday, the lowest reported since March 17 when there were 527.

A new subtype of the B.1.617 variant — first detected in India — was found in Hamilton. One case of the B.1.617.1 subtype was reported a day after two cases of B.1.617.2 were found in the city. There are now four cases of B.1.617 overall in Hamilton.

Two cases of yet another variant were also reported, only listed as “other.”

8:15 a.m. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has upgraded its outlook for Canadian economic growth for this year.

The Paris-based think tank says it now expects the Canadian economy to grow by 6.1 per cent this year. The prediction is up from an estimate for growth of 4.7 per cent that the OECD made in March.

It says the rebound will be thanks to reduced COVID-19 restrictions in the second half of the year and external demand.

The OECD says growth in Canada for 2022 is forecasted at 3.8 per cent compared with a March estimate of four per cent.

The improved outlook for Canada came as the OECD forecast global output would rise 5.8 per cent this year, up from its forecast of 4.8 per cent in December.

Statistics Canada is expected to release Canadian gross domestic product figures for the first quarter on Tuesday.

8:10 a.m. Asking when Toronto housing prices will drop is like asking when the Blue Jays will win a World Series: Likely not anytime soon and impossible to predict.

That’s why Ed Rempel, a GTA-based fee-for-service financial adviser and personal finance blogger, says you shouldn’t sell your home to cash in on the boom with the intention of renting until you can buy a discounted new home after prices fall to earth.

“There’s really not much reason for prices to come down in the near future. Prices are always high in Toronto,” Rempel says.

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Many market watchers say the housing bubble could pop at any moment — but many of those same pundits were saying the same thing a year ago, and they were wrong. The price of a detached home has risen by over 40 per cent since this time last year. By selling a home today, owners could lose out on another year of appreciating value.

Read the full story from the Star’s Jacob Lorinc

8 a.m. British health authorities are aiming to vaccinate 15,000 people in one day at London’s Twickenham rugby stadium as part of a race to contain a fast-spreading coronavirus variant.

The strain, first identified in India, accounts for a majority of new cases in the U.K., which is seeing a rise in infections after weeks of decline. Scientists say the variant is more transmissible than even the previously dominant strain first found in the U.K. but current vaccines are effective against it.

Many scientists are urging the Conservative government to delay plans to lift social distancing and other restrictions on June 21, arguing that more people need to be vaccinated before measures can be eased safely. The government will announce its decision on June 14.

Three-quarters of U.K. adults have had one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, and almost half have had both doses.

The Twickenham walk-in vaccination center is offering jabs without an appointment on Monday to people from northwest London, a hotspot for the Indian-identified variant.

Health officials in the northwest England town of Bolton, which had the highest rates of the new variant, say infections are starting to fall after a mass testing and “surge vaccination” campaign.

7:50 a.m. The Ontario government will not allow fans inside Scotiabank Arena Monday for the Game 7 showdown between the Leafs and the Habs — despite calls for the province to follow Quebec’s lead and let a limited number of spectators through the doors.

Ontario’s Ministry of Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Culture Industries confirmed Sunday that “no spectators are allowed to attend games in-person” — hours after Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown issued a call to allow 2,500 fully vaccinated health-care and essential workers to attend Monday’s big game.

“They have sacrificed so much during the pandemic and it would be great to recognize their heroic efforts,” Brown wrote in a letter addressed to outgoing chief medical officer of health Dr. David Williams.

Read the full story from the Star’s Wendy Gillis

7:35 a.m. Citing UEFA concerns about local COVID-19 rules in Scotland Croatia’s soccer federation said Monday it canceled plans to stay in St Andrews during the European Championship.

The Croatian delegation had booked to stay and train in the east-coast town that’s the traditional home of golf to prepare for two Euro 2020 group-stage games in Glasgow and one in London.

Citing “a recommendation from UEFA to change the location of its team base camp, due to the potential impact of the Scottish COVID-19 regulations on the national team’s daily routines,” the federation said it will now stay at home in Croatia.

Officials were “unwilling to risk the possibility of positive PCR results causing a large part of the team and team staff to be issued mandatory self-isolation orders,” the federation said.

UEFA has allowed teams to name 26-man squads instead of 23 to protect against disruption from infections before games.

Croatia begins its Group D program on June 13 against England at Wembley Stadium. The team then has games at Hampden Park — on June 18 against the Czech Republic and June 22 against host Scotland.

7:30 a.m. As wealthier countries like Canada begin to vaccinate kids and low-risk populations, health workers and other vulnerable groups in poorer countries remain unprotected, suffering disproportionately from a pandemic with no end in sight.

The widening global vaccine gap is a “scandalous inequity” that is prolonging the pandemic for everyone, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told delegates from 194 member states at the annual assembly Monday.

“There is no diplomatic way to say it: a small group of countries that make and buy the majority of the world’s vaccines control the fate of the rest of the world,” he said. More than three-quarters of the world’s vaccines have been administered in just 10 countries.

Read the full story from the Star’s Lex Harvey

7:12 a.m. This morning at 8 a.m., Toronto is adding 10,000 new appointments across the city-run immunization clinics at Metro Toronto Convention Centre, Toronto Congress Centre, Scarborough Town Centre and Cloverdale Mall for individuals age 80 and older to book accelerated second dose appointments.

As of Sunday evening, approximately 740,748 people have booked COVID-19 vaccination appointments at a city-run clinic.

To date, 2,161,925 COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered in Toronto.

Everyone age 12 years or older is encouraged to book an appointment by clicking the blue “Book a Vaccine” button at http://www.toronto.ca/covid-19 or through phone by calling the provincial vaccine booking line at 1-833-943-3900.

6 a.m. Ontario’s government is set to table a motion Monday that would replace the province’s top public health doctor.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says the province is moving to replace Dr. David Williams with Dr. Kieran Moore.

Moore currently serves as the top doctor at the Kingston-area public health unit, and is expected to take over as Ontario’s chief medical officer of health on June 26.

Williams had been slated to retire in September, but his last day has been pushed up by several months.

Elliott says Moore will start working with Williams on June 7 to ensure a smooth transition.

According to multiple sources with knowledge of the move, but who are not authorized to speak publicly, Dr. Kieran Moore, the much-respected medical officer of health for Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox and Addington, will replace Dr. Williams. Read more on Dr. Moore from the Star’s Bruce Arthur.

5:45 a.m.: The virus is on the decline but remains invisible and dangerous.

Of the 526,000 people in Ontario who contracted the virus, my old friend is one of the 26,000 who required hospitalization. I am one of the lucky 14 million who has not caught COVID-19.

No matter. We were both thankful to get our AstraZeneca booster shots on Thursday.

In two weeks, fully vaccinated, my friend, myself and thousands of others in the same boat will enjoy stronger protection against COVID-19 and help propel the province to the economic reopening everyone craves.

Read more from the Star’s Rob Ferguson, who is grateful that he received the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine — twice.

5:25 a.m.: Canada is set to receive 2.9 million COVID-19 vaccine doses this week thanks in large part to an increase in planned deliveries from Pfizer and BioNTech.

The two pharmaceutical companies had been delivering about 2 million shots per week through the month of May, but will increase that to 2.4 million doses per week starting on Monday.

The federal government says the other 500,000 shots due to arrive this week will come from Moderna, which will deliver the jabs in two separate shipments.

The first will arrive in the middle of the week while the second is due for delivery next weekend, with the doses set for distribution to provinces and territories next week.

The government is also expecting another 1 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine by the end of June, though a detailed delivery schedule has not been confirmed.

The fate of more than 300,000 shots from Johnson and Johnson that were first delivered in April remains unclear as Health Canada continues reviewing their safety following concerns about possible tainting at a Baltimore production facility.

The arrival of more Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna shots comes after Health Canada’s Saturday decision to extend the expiry date of tens of thousands of AstraZeneca doses by one month. Many Canadians had been scrambling to get a second shot before the original best-by date of May 31.

The department stressed in a statement that the move was supported by ample scientific evidence.

Ontario resumed the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine for second doses this past week, citing evidence that the likelihood of developing the condition is even lower after the follow-up shot than it is after the first injection.

5:20 a.m.: Several Quebec regions are being downgraded from the highest pandemic alert level today, allowing restrictions to ease.

Premier François Legault announced last week that the COVID-19 situation had improved enough to allow eight different regions to move fully or partially from the red to the orange alert level.

Five regions, including Quebec City, will move completely to the orange level, which will allow gyms and restaurant dining rooms to reopen.

5:15 a.m. Vietnam plans to test all 9 million people in its largest city for the coronavirus and imposed more restrictions Monday to deal with a growing COVID-19 outbreak.

People in Ho Chi Minh city are only allowed to leave home for necessary activities and public gatherings of more than 10 people are banned for the next two weeks, the government announced. Prior to the order, the city, also Vietnam’s economic hub, shut down non-essential business last Thursday when cases started to increase.

State newspaper Vietnam News said the city authority is planning to test its entire population with a testing capacity of 100,000 samples a day.

Read more from The Associated Press.

5 a.m. Authorities say a COVID-19 cluster in Australia’s second-largest city has spread into to nursing homes.

Victoria state began a seven-day lockdown on Friday due to a cluster in its capital Melbourne.

State health authorities on Monday announced 11 new cases.

A second staff member and a 90-year-old resident of the Arcare Maidstone Aged Care facility in Melbourne were among the new infections. The first infected staff member was reported on Sunday.

4:45 a.m.: Thailand reported a record number of new coronavirus cases on Monday as the governor of Bangkok announced an easing of some restrictions in effect for more than a month — including people visiting parks for exercise.

Thailand has been fighting to deal with a virus surge that began in early April in a group of nightclubs in Bangkok and has since spread around the country.

The Center for COVID-19 Situation Administration reported a record 5,485 new cases, of which 1,953 were in prisons. Confirmed deaths increased by 19 to bring the total to 1,031 since the pandemic began last year.

The total number of confirmed cases has now risen to 159,792, of which 82% occurred during the latest surge. Many of the cases are concentrated in prisons, housing for construction workers, factories, slums and low-income housing areas. Officials have in some cases been criticized for allowing companies to isolate and quarantine workers inside factories.

Thailand had been considered a success story last year for largely containing the virus, though at great economic cost, especially to its tourism sector, because foreign visitors were largely banned from entering the country.

4 a.m.: The latest numbers on COVID-19 vaccinations in Canada as of 4:00 a.m. ET on Monday May 31, 2021.

In Canada, the provinces are reporting 315,187 new vaccinations administered for a total of 23,471,446 doses given. Nationwide, 2,012,849 people or 5.3 per cent of the population has been fully vaccinated.

The provinces have administered doses at a rate of 61,931.118 per 100,000. There were no new vaccines delivered to the provinces and territories for a total of 26,018,414 doses delivered so far.

The provinces and territories have used 90.21 per cent of their available vaccine supply.Please note that Newfoundland and Labrador, P.E.I., Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and the territories typically do not report on a daily basis

4 a.m.: The latest numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 4:00 a.m. ET on Monday May 31, 2021.

There are 1,378,971 confirmed cases in Canada.

Canada: 1,378,971 confirmed cases (35,935 active, 1,317,524 resolved, 25,512 deaths). The total case count includes 13 confirmed cases among repatriated travellers.

There were 2,238 new cases Sunday. The rate of active cases is 94.55 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 19,112 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 2,730.

There were 34 new reported deaths Sunday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 281 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 40. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.11 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 67.13 per 100,000 people.

There have been 34,717,353 tests completed.

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Today's coronavirus news: Ontario reporting 916 COVID-19 cases and 13 deaths; 550 vaccinated frontline health-care workers invited to attend Game 7 of the Leafs-Canadiens series - Toronto Star
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Province to Release Reopening Plan This Week, Tourism Industry Pushing for July 1st - VOCM

The local tourism industry is eagerly awaiting the provincial government’s reopening plan, set to be announced this week.

New Brunswick and PEI announced their reopening plans last week and Hospitality Newfoundland and Labrador Chair Brenda O’Reilly hopes Newfoundland and Labrador’s plan looks more like New Brunswick’s than PEI’s more conservative phased-in approach.

O’Reilly says they’re hoping the province will fully open up to the rest of Canada by July 1st once first-shot vaccination rates reach 75 per cent of the population, but bookings for July are already suffering.

O’Reilly is fearful that this province is already falling behind New Brunswick and PEI which now have the advantage.

She says there is pent-up demand for travel and if people are not confident in the bookings they’re making, they’ll go elsewhere.



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Ontario sees fewer than 1000 new COVID-19 cases, reports 50 in Ottawa - CTV Edmonton

OTTAWA -- Ottawa Public Health is reporting 39 more people in Ottawa have tested positive for COVID-19, the lowest daily case count since late February.

It comes the same day the province reported fewer than 1,000 new cases in a single day for the first time since March.

One more person in Ottawa has died due to COVID-19. Sixty-three resident deaths have been reported in Ottawa in May. 

Ottawa Public Health's COVID-19 dashboard shows 27,058 total laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Ottawa since the first case was confirmed on March 11, 2020. 570 residents of the city have lost their lives to the pandemic.

Health officials reported 916 new confirmed infections across Ontario on Monday, along with 1,707 newly resolved cases. Another 13 Ontarians have died due to COVID-19. Public Health Ontario reported 50 new cases of COVID-19 in Ottawa in its daily update. Figures from OPH often differ from those provided by Public Health Ontario because the two heath agencies pull data for their respective daily reports at different times of the day.

The 916 new cases reported province-wide is the lowest figure since mid-February. The province says 18,226 tests were completed in the previous day; the positivity rate stands at 4.3 per cent.

Monday's update from Ottawa Public Health saw the city's weekly per capita incidence rate drop below 40 for the first time since mid-March, when the province moved Ottawa to what was then known as the "Red Control" restriction level. Ottawa's testing positivity rate has dropped below five per cent, and active cases are now below 700.

OTTAWA'S KEY COVID-19 STATISTICS

Ottawa entered Ontario's COVID-19 stay-at-home order at 12:01 a.m. April 8.

Ottawa Public Health data:

  • COVID-19 cases per 100,000 (May 23 to 29): 39.4 (down from 42.7)
  • Positivity rate in Ottawa (May 24 to 30): 4.7 per cent (down from 5.0 for May 21-27)
  • Reproduction number (seven day average): 0.93

Reproduction values greater than 1 indicate the virus is spreading and each case infects more than one contact. If it is less than 1, it means spread is slowing.

COVID-19 VACCINES IN OTTAWA

Ottawa Public Health updates vaccine numbers on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

As of May 31:

  • Ottawa residents with 1 dose (12+): 539,403 (+18,669)
  • Ottawa residents with 2 doses (12+): 50,601 (+4,512)
  • Total doses received in Ottawa: 541,850 

As of Monday, 62 per cent Ottawa residents 18 and older had received at least one dose of the vaccine.

*Total doses received does not include AstraZeneca doses shipped to pharmacies and primary care clinics.

HOSPITALIZATIONS IN OTTAWA

Ottawa Public Health reported 36 people in Ottawa hospitals with COVID-19 related illnesses on Monday, up from 33.

There are 10 people in intensive care units.

Hospitalizations (and ICU admissions) by age category:

  • 0-9: 0
  • 10-19: 0 
  • 20-29: 2 
  • 30-39: 3 (2 in ICU)
  • 40-49: 5 
  • 50-59: 6 (1 in ICU) 
  • 60-69: 10 (6 in ICU)
  • 70-79: 5 (1 in ICU)
  • 80-89: 3 
  • 90+: 2

These data are based on figures from Ottawa Public Health's COVID-19 dashboard, which refer to residents of Ottawa and do not include patient transfers from other regions.

ACTIVE CASES OF COVID-19 IN OTTAWA

The number of people with known active cases of COVID-19 in Ottawa is now below 700.

There are 676 active cases of COVID-19 in Ottawa on Monday, down from 709 active cases on Sunday.

OPH reported that 71 more people recovered after testing positive for COVID-19. The total number of resolved cases of coronavirus in Ottawa is now 25,812.

The number of active cases is the number of total laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 minus the numbers of resolved cases and deaths. A case is considered resolved 14 days after known symptom onset or positive test result.

VARIANTS OF CONCERN

Ottawa Public Health data*:

  • Total B.1.1.7 (UK variant) cases: 5,402 (+32)
  • Total B.1.351 (South Africa variant) cases: 283
  • Total P.1 (Brazil variant) cases: 26 
  • Total B.1.617 (India variant): 3
  • Total B.1.617.2: 3 
  • Other variant: 1
  • Total variants of concern/mutation cases: 6,352 (+37)
  • Deaths linked to variants/mutations: 63 (+1)

*OPH notes that that VOC and mutation trends must be treated with caution due to the varying time required to complete VOC testing and/or genomic analysis following the initial positive test for SARS-CoV-2. Test results may be completed in batches and data corrections or updates can result in changes to case counts that may differ from past reports.

COVID-19 CASES IN OTTAWA BY AGE CATEGORY

  • 0-9 years old: 5 new cases (2,200 total cases)
  • 10-19 years-old: 5 new cases (3,445 total cases)
  • 20-29 years-old: 3 new cases (6,088 total cases)
  • 30-39 years-old: 12 new cases (4,116 total cases)
  • 40-49 years-old: 3 new cases (3,558 total cases)
  • 50-59 years-old: 4 new cases (3,269 total cases)
  • 60-69-years-old: 5 new cases (1,933 total cases)
  • 70-79 years-old: 1 new case (1,076 total cases)
  • 80-89 years-old: 0 new cases (852 total cases)
  • 90+ years old: 1 new case (518 total cases)
  • Unknown: 0 new cases (3 cases total)  

COVID-19 TESTING IN OTTAWA

The Ottawa COVID-19 Testing Taskforce says 463 swabs were processed at local assessment centres on Sunday and labs performed 1,218 tests.

The average turnaround from the time the swab is taken at a testing site to the result is 15 hours.

Public Health Ontario says 18,226 COVID-19 tests were performed across Ontario on Sunday.

CASES OF COVID-19 AROUND THE REGION

  • Eastern Ontario Health Unit: 3 new cases
  • Hastings Prince Edward Public Health: 20 new cases
  • Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox & Addington Public Health: 0 new cases
  • Leeds, Grenville & Lanark District Health Unit: 0 new cases
  • Renfrew County and District Health Unit: 1 new case
  • Outaouais (Gatineau and western Quebec): 16 new cases

 

INSTITUTIONAL OUTBREAKS

Ottawa Public Health is reporting COVID-19 outbreaks at institutions in Ottawa, including long-term care homes, retirement homes, daycares, hospitals and schools.

The active community outbreaks are: 

  • Workplace – Construction: One outbreak 
  • Workplace – Health: One outbreak
  • Workplace – Retail: One outbreak
  • Workplace – Services: One outbreak

The schools and childcare spaces currently experiencing outbreaks are:

  1. Service A L'Enfrance Aladin St-Anne (May 13)
  2. La Coccinelle Des Sentiers child care (May 19) 

The long-term care homes, retirement homes, hospitals, and other spaces currently experiencing outbreaks are:

  1. Shelter A-14541 (April 25) 
  2. Montfort Hospital - 3C (April 27)
  3. Montfort Hospital - 5C (May 3)
  4. Group Home A-15690 (May 4)  
  5. Queensway Carleton Hospital – C3 (May 5) 
  6. Extendicare Starwood - 2 South (May 7) 
  7. Villa Marconi - 3rd Floor (May 10)
  8. The Ottawa Hospital General Campus - Single Unit 5E (May 15) 
  9. Elmsmere Villa Retirement Residence (May 17)
  10. Supported Independent Living A-16852 (May 17)
  11. Group Home A-16961 (May 18) 
  12. Centre D'Accueil Champlain - 2nd floor unit and 5th floor unit (May 19) 
  13. Elisabeth Bruyere Residence - REB 5 Unit (May 21) =
  14. Valley Stream Retirement Residence - Facility-wide (May 21) 
  15. Group Home A-17246 (May 22) 
  16. Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre (May 22) 
  17. Garry J Armstrong long-term care home - 5th floor and 6th floor (May 24) NEW
  18. The Ottawa Hospital Rehab Centre - Ward A (May 25)
  19. Maison Accueil Sagesse (May 25)
  20. Group Home A-17628 (May 29) NEW

 As of April 7, two cases of COVID-19 in a resident or staff member of a long-term care home, retirement home with an with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the facility is considered an outbreak in a long-term care home or retirement home. One laboratory-confirmed case of COVID-19 in a staff member or resident of other institutions such as shelters, group homes, is considered an outbreak. In childcare settings, two children or staff or household member cases of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 within a 14-day period where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the childcare establishment is considered an outbreak in a childcare establishment.

Under provincial guidelines, a COVID-19 outbreak in a school is defined as two or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in students and/or staff in a school with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the school (including transportation and before or after school care).

Two or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases in patients and/or staff in a hospital setting with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the hospital is considered an outbreak in a public hospital.

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Ontario sees fewer than 1000 new COVID-19 cases, reports 50 in Ottawa - CTV Edmonton
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Interior Health ramping up COVID-19 vaccine clinics for 2nd doses - Kelowna News - Castanet.net

Vaccination clinics in the B.C. Interior are going to be getting even busier as second doses start being administered.

Interior Health says 518,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have now been administered throughout the region.

“People are beginning to receive notifications telling them it’s time to book their second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine,” said Interior Health president and CEO Susan Brown.

"This means our clinics are returning to rural and remote communities, and we are adding new hours and options at our larger urban clinics, to make it as easy as possible for people to get their first and second dose.”

As of May 27, people who received the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine started being notified to book their second dose eight weeks after their initial immunization.

“Registering for your vaccine notifications is an important step to ensuring the highest protection from COVID-19,” added Brown. “Everyone should register and schedule their vaccination as soon as possible.”

So far in the B.C. Interior, immunizers across the region have delivered 485,143 first doses and 32,885 second doses for a total of 518,028 doses.

There are three ways to register for COVID-19 vaccine notifications:

  • Online by visiting the provincial website here.
  • By phone: 1-833-838-2323
  • In person at a Service BC office listed here.

New clinic dates for second doses in rural and remote communities will be published in the coming days here.

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Health Canada agrees to extend shelf-life of AstraZeneca as variant from India ups COVID threat - National Post

Ontario’s COVID-19 science advisory table is warning Premier Doug Ford that the variant that first emerged in India, known as B.1.617, presents 'a significant unknown'

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Will Health Canada’s decision to grant an extension to the best-before date on thousands of AstraZeneca  COVID-19 vaccine doses further spook public confidence in the troubled shots, or is there nothing really magical about drug expiry dates?

The drug regulator offered few details Saturday when it announced it was granting a one-month extension to the shelf life of two lots of AstraZeneca’s vaccines totalling about 49,000 doses. Any injections formerly set to expire Monday could now be used until July 1, the agency said.

In a three-paragraph statement Saturday, Health Canada said a submission from AstraZeneca “demonstrated that the quality, safety and efficacy of the two lots would be maintained for an extra month,” for a total of seven months, from the originally approved six months — an extension that would allow the provinces and territories to use up existing inventory “and provide Canadians access to much needed doses of the vaccine,” the agency said.

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In early May, Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin, then head of the national vaccine rollout, said there were 250,000 AstraZeneca doses left in the country, with most of them expiring at the end of June.

Some critics said granting an extension two days before an expiry date inspires little trust. “Doses just a couple days away from the manufacturer’s expiry magically got an extra month of life,” University of Ottawa professor of law Amir Attaran said on social media, noting that the World Health Organization, in a May 17 statement, recommended that any COVID-19 vaccine that has passed its expiry date should not be administered. “Expiry dates do not affect the safety of the vaccine,” the agency noted, “rather are related to the potency or amount of protection the vaccine gives.”

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“I am very pro-vaccine and swallow expired pills sometimes. But biological drugs are different,” said Attaran, who has a PhD in immunology. “If you are going to be vaccinated, I recommend you ask to see the expiry date on the vial, and don’t accept anything offered after it.”

Health Canada, in a statement to the Post, said its authorization of an extended expiry date isn’t in conflict with the WHO’s position.

“Health Canada agrees with the World Health Organization that expired vaccine should not be used and any expired doses should be disposed of safely,” the department said.

However, “the shelf-life of vaccines may be extended if scientific evidence is provided to regulatory authorities to approve such extension. It is not unusual for the shelf-life of vaccines, or other drug products, to be extended based on updated scientific data, especially in scenarios where there is a high medical need.”

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The shelf-life extension applies only to the two specific lots, the department added, “and does not apply to other lots of the AstraZeneca vaccine.”

  1. People at the Bill Durnan Arena COVID-19 vaccination site in Montreal, Saturday, May 22, 2021.

    Who among Canada's essential workers have been vaccinated? No one seems to know

  2. Anti-COVID vaccine protestors marched through London, England, on May 15, 2021.

    For both the COVID vaccine hesitant and refusers, much comes down to a lack of trust

Last week, Ontario un-paused its temporary halt of AstraZeneca, and announced it would start giving out seconds doses to those who received their first shots in March, in a bid to use up the province’s stockpile before it expires. (Most provinces paused the use of the vaccine for first doses earlier this month over the risk of rare, but potentially fatal, blood clots.)

The shots were further held up during a quality assurance check that left only a few days for pharmacists to scramble to administer them.

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To some, the federal messaging, or rather, lack of it, just further muddied the waters.

“If this is an evidence-based decision (and I’m assuming it is) then the key will be to frame the explanation in a way that is transparent and retains confidence,” Timothy Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in health law and policy at the University of Alberta, said in an email to the National Post Sunday.

Conflicting messaging is less-than-ideal, he said — “as we saw with early AZ recommendations.”

Dr. Isaac Bogoch said that, as far as he could tell, Health Canada and AstraZeneca looked at a representative sample of the lots that were about to expire and stability data from a sample of those vaccines, and deemed it acceptable and safe to extend the expiration date by a month.

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“That sounds reasonable to me,” said Bogoch, an infectious disease specialist and member of Ontario’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force. “If I was going to instill confidence in the process I would communicate as much as I possibly could — ‘this is what we did, this is how we did it, this is how we came to the conclusion, this is why we feel the vaccine is totally safe for use up until a month past their original expiration date.’ ”

It’s not like something magical happens at midnight tomorrow,

Dr. Lynora Saxinger

This isn’t milk or yogurt, others added. “Vaccine lots are coded, with a ‘changeable’ expiry date because they keep and quality test lot samples for stability,” University of Alberta infectious disease specialist Dr. Lynora Saxinger said on Twitter.

“Summary: not a worry,” Saxinger said.

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In an interview, Saxinger said the World Health Organization’s position appears to say “don’t try to game the system by hanging on to post-expired vaccines, because that could lead to problems, especially in countries where there’s really short supply and maybe corruption and a lot more chaos.”

On the other hand, “if the extended stability data is available before the expiry date, you can update it. So, I actually think that’s fine. It’s not like something magical happens at midnight tomorrow,” she said.

The doses set to expire were small, relatively speaking (Ontario received a shipment of 254,500 AstraZeneca doses the week of May 17). But the extended shelf life comes as pressure mounts to accelerate second doses of COVID vaccines amid the growing threat of variants. Ontario’s COVID-19 science advisory table is warning Ontario Premier Doug Ford that the variant that first emerged in India, known as B.1.617, presents “a significant unknown.”

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It now accounts for about 150 to 200 new cases daily in Ontario, or 10 to 15 per cent of new confirmed infections in the province, with the bulk dominant in Peel, followed by “highly burdened” areas of Toronto, meaning areas with a higher burden of essential workers, lower socioeconomic status and crowded living conditions, said Dr. Peter Jüni, the table’s scientific director.

If this is an evidence-based decision ... then the key will be to frame the explanation in a way that is transparent

Timothy Caulfield

The group is now conducting modelling to determine how much could be gained in controlling the variant’s spread by moving fast with second vaccine doses in those areas. “What we want is for those regions that are now challenged with this new variant, we want full protection there so we can minimize the selective effect of partial vaccination,” Jüni said.

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In the meantime, people “should stay put where they are” and not travel between public health units, he said.

The variant, confirmed in most provinces, is believed 50 per cent more transmissible than the variant first identified in England, which was 50 per cent more transmissible than the early variants originally found in Wuhan, China. “This is basically upping the game,” Jüni said.

“We need to address this and not repeat the mistakes that were made in February — meaning, carefully monitor B.1.617 and, unlike February, react early if we see signals that it is getting out of control.”

A study published last week by Public Health England found that two doses of AstraZeneca vaccine were 60 per cent effective against B.1.617, while two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech gave 88 per cent protection against symptomatic disease.

However, both vaccines were only 33.5 per cent effective against the variant after one dose.

Additional reporting by The Canadian Press.

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Health Canada agrees to extend shelf-life of AstraZeneca as variant from India ups COVID threat - National Post
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Finding rapid COVID-19 tests across Canada, from relative ease to utter frustration - Global News

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