Canada is falling behind in Covid vaccinations

Canada has secured the world’s largest number of potential Covid vaccine doses per capita – but it’s struggling to get its hands on some of those doses and to get jabs into arms.

On Friday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised an “enormous increase” in doses coming to Canada of both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, the only two currently authorised for use in the country, reports BBC.

He is under pressure from critics who say he has not delivered vaccines fast enough, and has promised that all Canadians who want a vaccine will get one by the end of September.

Canada’s inoculation drive began 14 December, and the country has so far given just over 1.18 million doses. It currently stands at 40 in global rankings of doses per 100 people, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Just over three out of 100 Canadians have received at least one dose, compared to about 14 in the US and 21 in the UK.

WHY IS CANADA LAGGING BEHIND?

Canada was criticised at the end of last year for buying up multiple times the supply it needs to cover its population.

It has signed deals with seven vaccine suppliers – Moderna and Pfizer, as well as ones with pending authorisation like AstraZeneca and Johnson and Johnson – for a total of over 400 million doses.

But it seems it wasn’t positioned for priority delivery of the two authorised jabs.

That’s partly because the country decided to invest in vaccines from European factories, afraid that the US, under former president Donald Trump, would issue export bans.

But European factories are struggling with supply and recently it has been the EU, not the US, that has been threatening those bans.

Canada lacks domestic production capacity for vaccines.

There have been delivery delays, with reduced or cancelled orders, in recent weeks for both the Moderna and Pfizer inoculations.

One count by Maclean’s magazine suggested Canada’s current supply is behind by about one million doses.

As of this week, 2.43% of the population had received at least one dose of the vaccine.

Almost 12% of people over 80 and just over 55% of priority healthcare workers have received at least one jab, according to government data.

Canada is expecting six million doses by the end of March, a deadline Mr Trudeau has said suppliers expect to meet.

WHAT HAS THE REACTION BE LIKE?

There are indications Canadians – many who have been under strict winter lockdowns – are frustrated with the slow pace of vaccinations.

“Delays in the delivery of vaccines appear to have hurt the Liberals,” said Canadian polling firm Abacus Data on 5 February.

“Government approval, the prime minister’s image, and vote share are all down over the past few weeks. Simultaneously, negative perceptions of the government’s handling of the vaccination file have risen sharply.”

Provincial premiers have expressed disapproval.

On Thursday, Manitoba announced a bid to buy two million doses of a coronavirus vaccine candidate in early trials, bypassing Ottawa. Alberta has also suggested it will seek out its own vaccine supplies.

And Canada found itself defending its decision to draw on a supply of coronavirus vaccines from a global inoculation-sharing initiative known as Covax, which pools funds from wealthier countries to help buy vaccines for themselves and low-income nations.

WHAT EFFORTS ARE BEING MADE TO FIX THE ISSUE?

On Friday, Mr Trudeau announced that Canada will be getting some Pfizer doses ahead of schedule and has bought four million additional doses of the Moderna vaccine.

He said he understands the “anxiety” about the recent interruptions.

In a bid to boost domestic production, Canada announced last week that it signed its first deal to allow a foreign coronavirus vaccine, developed by Novavax, to be manufactured locally.

However, that vaccine is still in phase three trials and the Montreal production facility remains under construction.

Additionally, the country has authorised six doses to be taken from each vial of Pfizer’s vaccine rather than the originally intended five.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through [email protected]
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