Ontario to Start COVID-19 Vaccinations in Long Term Care Within Days: Hillier

Ontario to Start COVID-19 Vaccinations in Long Term Care Within Days: Hillier
In this handout photo, José Bruballa, 86, receives one of the first Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines in Spain at the Somontano nursing home on Dec. 27, 2020 in Barbastro, Spain. Alvaro Calvo/Government of Aragon via Getty Images
The Canadian Press
Updated:

TORONTO—Residents in long-term care will start receiving COVID-19 vaccines within days, and more than half of Ontarians—including some in the general population—are slated to be immunized by mid-summer, the head of the province’s inoculation campaign said Tuesday.

In an update on Ontario’s COVID-19 vaccination plan, retired Gen. Rick Hillier said the province expects to receive roughly 50,000 doses of the Moderna shot on Wednesday, and distribute them to long-term care and retirement homes.

Immunizations should begin at those sites within 48 to 72 hours after the vaccine is received, he said as the province marked another record high in new daily COVID-19 infections.

Another 50,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine are expected to arrive in Ontario next month, largely earmarked for remote northern and Indigenous communities, he said.

The province hopes to have inoculated more than a million health-care workers and people in other vulnerable groups by the end of the first phase of its vaccine rollout, which will last through the winter, he said.

Some 15 million vaccines are set to arrive in Ontario during the spring, and while it has not yet been determined where or to whom they will be administered during the second phase of the rollout, about 8.5 million Ontarians should be able to get the shot by mid-summer, Hillier said.

“I think we can get to a lot of mainstream Ontario by late July,'' he said.

“Certainly in Phase 2, we will get at a lot of the people in Ontario who don’t have underlying conditions, who are not the most vulnerable, who are not most at risk.'’

Meanwhile, Ontario’s finance minister remains out of the country after leaving for a “planned personal trip'' earlier this month, according to his office.

Rod Phillips said in a statement that he and his wife left the country after the end of the provincial legislative session on Dec. 8.

He said had he known Ontario would be placed under a provincewide lockdown on Boxing Day, he would have cancelled the trip, and he plans to abide by health guidelines such as self-isolation upon his return.

Phillips has posted photos on social media in recent weeks that show him at locations in Ontario, but his office said Tuesday the photos had been taken before his departure.

The province continues to urge people to refrain from non-essential travel, and Phillips came under fire Tuesday for contravening those guidelines.

Opposition legislators said the minister should face consequences for going on an international trip when Ontarians are being told to stay home.

“These guys just think the rules don’t apply to them,'' NDP legislator Sara Singh said in a statement.

News of the minister’s travel came as Ontario reported nearly 4,500 new cases of COVID-19 over two days and a total of 78 new deaths.

The province said 2,553 new infections were recorded Tuesday—a new daily peak—and 1,939 on Monday. Ontario also reported 37 new deaths on Sunday and 41 more on Monday.

Of Tuesday’s case tally, 895 were in Toronto, 496 in Peel Region, 147 in Windsor-Essex, 144 in Hamilton and 142 in York Region. Provincial COVID-19 data were not released Monday due to the holiday.

Ontario’s associate chief medical officer of health, Dr. Barbara Yaffe, said the province also hit a new high Tuesday for the proportion of COVID-19 tests coming back positive, with a positivity rate of 9.7 percent.

While it’s too early for the spike in new infections to stem from Christmas celebrations, it’s likely connected to preparations for the holidays, she said.

Vaccinations in Ontario were also expected to return to full operations Tuesday after being scaled down over the holidays.

The province has said five vaccination clinics were open on Sunday, 10 were back in action Monday and all of them were set to resume immunizations Tuesday.

Hillier said the call to close clinics over Christmas Day and Boxing Day was the “wrong decision.'’

“We’ve heard the voices of the people of Ontario, saying ‘get on with this,’ and that’s what we are going to do,'' he said Tuesday.

More than 14,000 people in the province have received their first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech shot as of Tuesday morning, he said.

The storage requirement for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine means it will be used primarily in hospitals, while the more recently approved Moderna vaccine will go to long-term care homes, congregate settings and more rural communities.

Hillier said he has also asked Health Canada to look into the possibility of administering only a single dose of the Moderna shot, rather than two, saying it would allow vaccinations to proceed much faster.

By Paola Loriggio