Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. long-term care workers vaccinated next week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2020 12:18 AM
  • B.C. long-term care workers vaccinated next week

British Columbia's top doctor says health-care workers in long-term care facilities and intensive care units will be the first to be immunized against COVID-19 with the Pfizer vaccine starting next week.

Dr. Bonnie Henry says immunizations will happen at two clinics in the Vancouver Coastal Health and Fraser Health regions, before eventually expanding to 30 sites as part of a process that will ramp up as more doses and vaccines become available.

Up to 400,000 B.C. residents can get a shot in the arm by the end of March.

Henry says prioritizing those who work at care homes will protect the elderly, who can't travel to sites where the vaccine must be administered because it needs to be kept at a very cold temperature.

Henry says a dry run at one clinic yesterday on handling the vaccine allowed people running the vaccination program as well as those who would be working with it to grasp the reality of having it available.

She says precautions such as washing hands and wearing masks will need to continue for a few months, though she expects a "good summer" is on the horizon.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM
The prime minister nonetheless played down any potential threat to Canadian access to vaccines, noting the federal government has signed orders for millions of doses from a variety of foreign pharmaceutical companies in recent months.

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix spent part of their news conference today explaining what counts as an event or social gathering.

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown
Fortunately the parent spotted the candy and warned other parents in the area, and Delta Police received no other complaints or information about children consuming cannabis.

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown

Rights complaints filed over bank's fraud claims

Rights complaints filed over bank's fraud claims
Maxwell Johnson's complaint says both he and his 12-year-old granddaughter were detained last December by Vancouver police officers when they tried to open an account at the Bank of Montreal using their Indigenous status cards.

Rights complaints filed over bank's fraud claims

How do leading vaccine candidates compare?

How do leading vaccine candidates compare?
The Canadian Press asked Kelly Grindrod, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo's School of Pharmacy, and Dr. Earl Brown, a virology and microbiology expert at the University of Ottawa, to break down those questions.

How do leading vaccine candidates compare?

Downtown house party results in $2,300 ticket

Downtown house party results in $2,300 ticket
Responding officers were surprised to see a group of people openly flouting COVID-19 restrictions for social gatherings.

Downtown house party results in $2,300 ticket