Sask. should expect 90,000 doses in 1st shipments of COVID-19 vaccine that targets Omicron - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:52 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Sask. should expect 90,000 doses in 1st shipments of COVID-19 vaccine that targets Omicron

Saskatchewan will be getting 90,000 doses of Moderna's Omicron-targeting bivalent COVID-19 vaccine from the federal government.

U of S epidemiology professor says those at risk should be prioritized to get Moderna's new bivalent vaccine

A Moderna vaccine bottle on a blue cloth.
Moderna has said it will supply Canada with 12 million doses of its COVID-19 shot adapted to target the Omicron variant. Saskatchewan will get about 90,000 doses to start, the provincial health authority says. (Rogelio V. Solis/The Associated Press)

Saskatchewan will be getting 90,000doses of Moderna's Omicron-targeting COVID-19 vaccine from the federal government.

The Saskatchewan Health Authoritysays it will receive the doses of the bivalent vaccine which targets both the original strain of the coronavirus and the Omicron variantin two shipments, with more to follow later this month.

In an email to CBC, the health authority said it will make a public announcement next week on delivery timelines and eligibility.

Nazeem Muhajarine, a professor of community health and epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan, says peoplemost at risk from COVID-19 should be prioritized.

That includes "older people and people who have some immunocompromised situation, who might have some serious chronic conditionsand that could include children who are immunocompromised," he said.

Health Canada authorized the use of the bivalent vaccine for those age 18 and older on Thursday.

With the initial supply of the bivalent vaccine limited, the provincial health authority said it will work with the Ministry of Health to review options, and may prioritize those at highest risk for serious COVID-19 illness.

Muhajarine said the new vaccine comes at a good time.

Dr. Nazeem Muhajarine, an epidemiologist and professor at the University of Saskatchewan, says the new Moderna vaccine targeting Omicron variants comes at a good time. (University of Saskatchewan/On Campus News)

"Schools reopened yesterday and people are going back to work after summer holidays," he said. "We are gradually moving into the fall-winter season, [which is] typically the flu season, and we'll be inside for longer in the coming months.

"And importantly, many people who have vaccine doses previously have had them some time back. Many months have passed since they've had their vaccine dose."

Health Canada says Moderna's new vaccine shows "significantly higher responses" to the Omicron BA.1 virus in comparison to Moderna's original coronavirus vaccine, officially branded as Spikevax.

While the updated vaccine was developed to target the Omicron BA.1 variant, Health Canada says clinical trials suggest the new vaccine still elicits a "stronger immune response" against the more recent mutations of Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 that are now dominant.

Muhajarine said the new vaccine booster has been shown to be effective against the Omicron subvariants, and getting the booster could shield people from the worst of the virus.

"Hundreds of hospitalizations could be averted [in the province] by this bivalent vaccine right now," he said. "So it is quite efficacious against getting infected with Omicron, and also keeping people away from hospitals and avoiding death as well."

An interior shot of the new emergency ward at Saskatoon's Royal University Hospital from Sept. 5, 2019, show the Saskatchewan Health Authority logo.
The Saskatchewan Health Authority says it will make an announcement next week on delivery timelines and eligibility for bivalent booster doses. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

He said COVID-19 hasn't gone away yet.

"A lot of people think this is the end, or beginning of the end. I like to think that this is the end of the beginning," Muhajarine said, adding peoplestill need to be cautious, despite most of the population having been vaccinated.

He said wearing a maskis still an important precaution, and people should stay home if they feel unwell.

While most people will recover from a COVID-19 infection fairly quickly, for "about one in four people,this is a long-lasting problem sometimes three months out, six months out, sometimes a year after you had been initially infected," said Muhajarine.

"So that post-COVIDcondition is something really, really important to keep in mind, and it is not something that you want to get."

With files from Nick Boisvert