Despite Alberta's pleas for single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, uptake is slow - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 08:07 PM | Calgary | 1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Despite Alberta's pleas for single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, uptake is slow

in a bid to raise vaccination rates among holdouts, doses of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine are now available in several provinces, includingBritish Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta.But uptake of thesingle-doseoption has been slow.

'It took a long time to get this vaccine,' says co-lead of Alberta's vaccine task force

Vials of the single-dose Johnson & Johnson Janssen COVID-19 vaccine are pictured at the ZNA Middelheim hospital in Antwerp, Belgium. (Dirk Waem/BELGA/AFP/Getty Images)

In a bid to raise vaccination rates among holdouts, doses of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine are now available in several provinces, includingBritish Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta.

But uptake of thesingle-doseoption has been slow to start.

Earlier this month, Alberta received 5,000 doses of the J&J vaccine.In the first week of its campaign, 1,190 shots were administered in the province.

Part of the problem with uptake is likely the length of time it took to get the vaccine, saidDr. Cheri Nijssen-Jordan, co-lead of Alberta's VaccineTask Force.

After the province implemented proof of vaccination at many businesses in September, many people who had been holding out got vaccinated with other vaccines, she said,so they could access services.

"We do find that people that want specialized vaccines, specialized treatments can be quite vocal. It's hard to know the numbers that actually underlie that," she said.

As of Thursday, nearly 83 per cent of Albertans aged 12 or older had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Though Johnson & Johnson's JanssenCOVID-19 vaccine has been approved for usein Canada since last March for adults aged 18 or older, none had been administered in the country because of a quality control issue.

Alberta's plea for the J&Jvaccine came at the end of September, with Premier Jason Kenneysaying some unvaccinated residents in rural Alberta were asking for that specific brand.

"What we're hearing issome of the vaccine-hesitant in those regions tell us they are willing to take the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, but are hesitant for one reason or another about the mRNA [vaccines] and AstraZeneca," said Kenney at the time,asking the federal government forhelp in sourcinga supply.

The J&J shotis a viral vector vaccine, which may ease concerns for those with unfounded fears about newer mRNA vaccines. It is also asingle-dose option and a person is considered fully vaccinated 14 days after inoculation.

Dr. Noel Gibney is a professor emeritus of critical care medicine at the University of Alberta. (Peter Evans/CBC)

But booster shots for those vaccinated with J&J are still likelyand that could lower its appeal, said Dr. Noel Gibney, a professor emeritus of critical care medicine at the University of Alberta.

Currently, Health Canada has only approved the use ofthe Pfizer-BioNTechand Moderna vaccines for booster shots.

"The value is limited," Gibney said of the J&J option. "And at the end of the day, you're probably going to need to get either the Moderna or the Pfizer [vaccine] anyway."

He said, however, it is still worth it for someone to be vaccinated with J&Jbecause of the protection it provides against severe illness and hospitalization. According to Health Canada, clinical trials showedthat starting two weeks after vaccination with the single-dose Johnson & Johnson adenovirus vector vaccine, itwas 66 per cent effective in protecting participants from COVID-19.

Nijssen-Jordan said it is always difficult to bring people in for boosters of any vaccines, but she is hopeful that those who receive the J&J shot will become more open to the idea.

"Hopefully,[with] the scientific evidence,some people will be paying attention and advising appropriately," she said.

Danielle Smith told CBC News she went to Arizona in September to get her single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. (CBC)

Former Wildrose leader Danielle Smith was among those pushingto bring the J&J vaccine to Alberta.In September, Smith flew to Phoenix, Ariz.,to get the one-dose vaccinethere, asit was not available in Canada at the time.

"It just seemed to make the most sense for me to have a single shot, so that I'd be able to get back to my life very quickly," she said.

Despite the slow start to the campaign, Alberta Health Servicesis expecting all 5,000 doses of the J&J vaccine to be in arms before Christmas.

Meanwhile, Saskatchewan received 2,500 doses of the J&J COVID-19 vaccine, which it began administering Wednesday. B.C. received 5,000 doses, with the priority in that province going to health-care workers who have objected to being vaccinated with the other shots available to date.

Health Canadahas also approvedPfizer-BioNTech'svaccine for children aged five to 11, anddoses are expected to begin arriving in the country on Sunday