Provincial officials say they plan to administer first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to all long-term care home residents in Ontario 10 days sooner than planned as at least one facility in outbreak has reported multiple cases of the UK variant.
Last Updated Monday, January 25, 2021 12:55PM EST Provincial officials say they plan to administer first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to all residents of Ontario s long-term care facilities and high-risk retirement homes 10 days sooner than planned as at least one facility in outbreak has reported multiple cases of the UK variant. The province, which provided an update this morning on their plan to administer COVID-19 vaccines in Ontario, has been forced to change gears amid delivery delays from Pfizer. The province received no new doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine this week and Ontario will receive approximately 26,000 doses on the week of Feb. 1, a significant reduction in the number of doses than was previously expected.
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TORONTO Provincial officials say they plan to administer first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to all long-term care home residents in Ontario 10 days sooner than planned as at least one facility in outbreak has reported multiple cases of the U.K. variant. The province provided an update this morning on their plan to administer COVID-19 vaccines in Ontario as health officials have been forced to change gears amid delivery delays from Pfizer. The province received no new doses from Pfizer this week and Ontario will receive approximately 26,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine on the week of Feb. 1, a significant reduction in the number of doses than was previously expected.