COVID-19 antiviral treatments expected to increase on P.E.I. - Action News
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PEI

COVID-19 antiviral treatments expected to increase on P.E.I.

Paxlovid and other antiviral treatments for COVID-19 are now available on a limited basis and the hope is to expand access as the province gets a greater supply.

'We feel we have avoided hospitalization for a large number of people,' says chief public health officer

Paxlovid, Pfizer's COVID-19 antiviral drug, is now available on P.E.I. (Cory Herperger/Radio-Canada)

P.E.I.'s public health officesays antiviral drugs are helping in the fight against COVID-19. The province has received900 boxesof the antiviral drug Paxlovid and expects more in the coming months.

Other antiviralsandtreatmentsare also being used to help treat people with COVID-19.

P.E.I.'s Chief Public Health OfficerDr. Heather Morrison stresses these treatmentsare not a replacement for vaccines but canhelp people who are classified as high risk, such as people 50 or older, theimmunocompromised or others with underlying conditions or who are not fully vaccinated.

Morrison explained Paxlovidcontains aninhibitor that helps stop the virus from making copies of itselfand spreading, thus helping the body fight off the virus more easily.

"It gives your immune system time to work at clearing the virus," she said.

"This is a medication that is primarily recommended for individuals who are at high risk of disease progression."

Several patients have reported feeling significantly better upon completion of the treatment, whichclinical trials show reducesthe likelihood of someone ending up in hospital, Morrison said.

According to instructions on the Paxlovid box, patients must take pills twice a day. (Laura Meader/CBC)

As of March 19, about 242 treatments of Paxlovid hadbeen dispensed in P.E.I.by participating pharmacies, she said.

"We feel we have avoided hospitalization for a large number of people," she said.

Supply expected to grow

Morrison said P.E.I has enough Paxlovidfor now and she expects the province will get more antivirals in the near future.

"We absolutely have enough, and I would think after this phase and as the country gets more antiviral available, this will become more widespread in more pharmacies and will be prescribed by more people here in the province, which will be great."

P.E.I.'s rate of prescribing Paxlovid is higher than elsewhere in Atlantic Canada, she said.

P.E.I. has eight pharmacies designated to work with specific doctors who have been given authority to prescribe Paxlovid.

Referrals for confirmed positive cases must come within five days of testing positive. Individuals can be identified by a range of staffinvolved in P.E.I. health care such as: family doctors, 811 call-takers, emergency room physicians,COVID case calling teams, home care nursing staff, and staff at the First Nations Health Centre.

P.E.I.'s rate of prescribing Paxlovid is higher than elsewhere in Atlantic Canada, says Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Heather Morrison. (Pfizer/Reuters)

"Theyare subsequently contacted by a prescribing physician, who conducts a telephone assessment, and then really collaborates with the community pharmacist to dispense the medication if it's indicated," said Morrison.

Not everyone who is high risk is able to take Paxlovid because of interactions with other medications, she said.

Other treatments can be given when this happens and Health Canada is in the process of looking at approving more treatments, she said.

"We'll continue to look at the trials and the studies along with our colleagues across the country," she said.