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The medical officer of health for Windsor-Essex is urging people to ask their doctors questions about COVID-19 vaccines instead of “falling into the trap” of misinformation on social media.
In an effort to bolster confidence in the shots approved by Health Canada and being administered locally by the thousands each week, Dr. Wajid Ahmed on Wednesday shared evidence of the jab’s efficacy.
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With more than 82 per cent of area residents age 60 and older inoculated with at least one dose, and those living in long-term care and retirement homes fully immunized, “we are not seeing cases in that age group,” Ahmed said.
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The announcement that Pfizer will ship vaccines to Canada from its Michigan plant means Windsor could soon start receiving more doses at a faster rate, according to the CEO of Windsor Regional Hospital.
David Musyj said the first shipment from Kalamazoo, Mich., will arrive in Windsor this week.
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“If we were to have a good sign about future supplies, stability of future supplies and increase of future supplies, it’s the fact Pfizer is now shipping from Kalamazoo to us,” he said. “It provides comfort for us.”
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Windsor’s first-ever walk-up pop-up vaccine clinics ran out of doses mere hours after opening Monday morning with hundreds arriving early and braving rainfall to roll up their sleeves.
A line of more than 200 wrapped around Mackenzie Hall and the former Windsor Jail beside it by 8:45 a.m., 15 minutes before the one-day COVID-19 vaccine clinic officially opened its doors to let a few clients in. So many showed up that the local health unit decided to allot the west-end pop-up an extra 150 doses.
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Two hot-spot neighbourhoods in Windsor will be targeted with pop-up COVID-19 vaccine clinics for residents age 18 and older on Monday, the local health unit has announced.
Adults who live in, or perform essential work in, the N9A and N9C postal codes Windsor’s downtown and west end will be eligible for the shot from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at yet-to-be-disclosed locations. Attendees must provide proof of address, or work identification or a pay stub to qualify. The province has identified both areas as having been particularly hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, and data from the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit shows vaccine coverage rates there have so far been low.