All patients admitted to KHSC will undergo Covid-19 testing
Ontario Website now open to book vaccines for people over age 80 (initially): https://covid-19.ontario.ca/book-vaccine/ (click here).
New KHSC policy for staff, trainees and faculty who live and work in a red/gray zone: Weekly swabs and work place isolation are now recommended and you will be required to work under work place isolation rules. This is very relevant since Lanark Leeds Grenville is now a nearby red zone in which some of our workers reside.
Universal masking: All patients and visitors to KHSC will be provided with medical masks at the doors of KHSC (to replace their cloth masks upon entry).
KHSC Staff, trainees and faculty please note:***On March31st invitations to register for 2nd vaccine dose will start to be sent out to KHSC staff***
1) COVID-19 Vaccines and Vaccine Hesitancy: Staring at the Clouds of Vaccine misinformation (click here):
2) World vaccine roll-out tops 552 million people (click here)! Real world evidence that vaccination is safe and effective.
3) All about COVID-19 Vaccines: Updated FAQs about vaccination: New FAQ: If I have a solid organ transplant or I am a cancer patient should I have my second vaccine dose at the original interval?
4) KFL&A COVID-19 rates rise by 69 cases since Monday-203 active cases in our part of SE Ontario (see update from KFL& A Public Health)
5) Ontario infection rates are up from Monday with 2094 new cases yesterday. New and active cases are up 32% and 29%, respectively and Ontario’s case rate of positive tests has soared to 6.1% (click here) (click here).
6) Canada’s COVID-19 epidemic: 30,466 new cases in the past week with a rise in new and active cases nationally of 23% and 21% plus a 3% increase in hospitalizations (click here) (click here). 11.9% of Canadians are vaccinated.
7) Canada is scheduled to receive ~3.3 million vaccines this week (a mixture of all 3 approved vaccine types) (click here).
8) The global pandemic: >127 million cases to date and new case rates on the rise (click here); up almost 2 million cases since Thursday!
9) KHSC capacity is better with 75 beds available (including 14 intensive care beds)
10) Improvement in COVID-19 in Ontario’s Long Term Care facilities (LTC)-evidence vaccines work: click here
11) Increased COVID-19 in school age children: (click here).
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1) COVID-19 Vaccines and Vaccine Hesitancy: Staring at the Clouds of Vaccine misinformation (click here): The COVID-19 vaccines: desired by most people but vilified by others. These vaccines stand as an amazing achievement. They are safe, effective, contain no virus, cannot give you COVID-19, have rate of serious adverse events <1/10,000/vaccination and have crushed COVID-19 rates in nursing homes and in countries where they are widely used…and yet the fake news machines have inundated people with false information that makes some people hesitant. I offer two word clouds for your consideration. Cloud 1 acknowledges the fake news about vaccines (it’s important to know the stuff people in our society are reading and hearing-wrong as it is). The second cloud provides the correct information.
Should you take the vaccine? This question has a simple answer-yes! You are doing it for yourself but equally importantly you are doing it for your loved ones, your neighbours and for the rest of society. Your personal choice to get vaccinated when it is offered advances our universal hope we can get back to normal soon! For more read the following (How to debunk misinformation about COVID, vaccines and masks by Kathleen Jamieson)
Cloud 1: A Cloud full of Misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines
Cloud 2: The truth about COVID-19 vaccines
Nonetheless, many people remain “hesitant” to get vaccinated despite reassurance (from clinical trials and massive real-world experience). It is not just Canadians who are hesitant (see graph below)…and that’s bad news for global health. Most countries have >25% of residents who would not take the vaccine for COVID-19 if offered “this week”-Don’t be one of them!
Despite enthusiasm by most Canadians ~40% of us don’t want the vaccine. There is a litany of reasons for this hesitancy and they are not readily persuadable that getting the vaccine is good for them and good for society. We use the label vaccine “hesitancy” to excuse vaccine refusal; but in the end this personal choice is a problem for the restoration of an open Canadian society. There was a time in Canada when it passed as common sense that we got our children vaccinated for polio, smallpox, measles, mumps, and rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, typhoid and meningitis. People of a certain age remembered when these diseases were scourges. They also had confidence in the medical profession. Oddly the emergence of general good health in Canadian society (in part due to antibiotics and vaccines) has rendered us complacent. Do we really need these shots? Perhaps we can be forgiven for complacency when we haven’t seen a disease in a while. However, two events occurred that set us up for the intensification of vaccine hesitancy. The first event was a lie, the second a vehicle to deliver incorrect information. First the lie: In the late 1990s and early 2000 there emerged an incorrect and fraudulent narrative that vaccines were causing all manner of adverse effects. Whether it was mercury in the vaccine vehicle or the vaccine itself people were told the vaccines caused autism. They do not! Andrew Wakefield, then a physician, was a standard bearer for concerned parents who wanted an explanation for their child’s ill health. Mr. Wakefield told a lie and managed to publish it in The Lancet. He fabricated data and suggested that the measles mumps and rubella vaccine cause autism; it does not. The paper has been retracted. The paper was subsequently shown to be not only incorrect; it was fraudulent (click here). The second event that set us up to be hesitant was rise of an unedited internet which made everyone a medical expert and deluges us with fake news. Do you believe the government is in collusion with Bill Gates to poison you with microchips through vaccines?-If you do, you can find a home on the internet (click here)!
The evidence in hand strongly justifies that one accept the first vaccine one is offered (click here). Waiting exposes you and your loved ones to the risk of infection with a variant coronavirus. Waiting is unwise, since all vaccines prevent death and serious adverse outcomes with >90% effectiveness (including the Astra Zeneca vaccine). We will not be able to reopen society if 40% of Canadians indulge their anxieties and refuse vaccination. This is particularly important for health care workers and other people who are entrusted with the care of their fellow Canadians. If you want some data for your next cocktail party (with you and your 4 friends), here are the Canadian vaccine safety data for all vaccines as of March 12th(click here).
The bottom line? If you get vaccinated you have a 1/10,000 risk of a serious allergic reaction and no one has died of the vaccines in Canada. In return you get >90% protection from a COVID-19 death.
2) World vaccine roll-out tops 552 million people (click here)! Real world evidence that vaccination is safe and effective.
Vaccines in arms as of March 29th 2021
The good news is our vaccines work; however the emergence of increasing numbers of variant viruses (which are less vaccine sensitive) is a reminder of the urgency of a global vaccine roll-out. Variant viruses emerge when large numbers of people are infected. Ultimately if new viruses vary too much from the “vaccine-targeted virus” the vaccine might not work. For the undecided 40% of Canadians who are unsure they want to commit to taking a vaccine now, please believe me when I say that time is of the essence. The more time the virus has to infect unvaccinated people the more time it has to mutate and develop the ability to evade vaccine-induced antibodies.
There is real world evidence the vaccines work. The map below shows the fall in confirmed infection COVID-19 rates in countries that have an effective vaccine roll out, like the UK, USA and Israel. Note the rates of infection in these countries fell rapidly with the introduction of the vaccine in 2021. IN contrast rates of infection are rising in areas like Canada and India, where vaccine roll out has been slower. This is a global “real world” illustration that vaccines work!
Real world evidence vaccines work March 29th, 2021 (click here)-Compare rate trends for active cases in the USA vs Canada
All approved vaccines in Canada are safe and effective after through vetting by Health Canada. No corners have been cut in the Health Canada review of their safety. We now have unprecedented evidence of safety from the tens of millions of people vaccinated world-wide (click here). To date over 552,000,000 people have been vaccinated! So if you are “waiting” for more safety data…I would argue that all the data a reasonable person should need are there already. We also have safety data from numerous clinical trials, which in combination with the re-world experience, should be reassuring!
5) Here are answers to some updated FAQs with answers to common questions about the COVID-19 vaccines (most recent at the top).
1) New FAQ: If I have a solid organ transplant or I am a cancer patient should I have my second vaccine dose at the original interval?
The short answer is yes (although it is not based on clinical trial data). Emerging “real world” data (aka experience) suggests that transplant recipients and active cancer chemotherapy patients (with specific treatment and timing considerations) are now eligible to have their 2nd dose of COVID-19 vaccine at the original interval (<30 days from dose 1); rather than the revised 16-week interval. KHSC is currently in the process of operationalizing this new recommendation (which was issued at noon today).
FAQ 2) Which vaccine will/should I get? The short answer is that all vaccines effectively prevent COVID-19 death and severe adverse outcomes-so take the one that you are offered. They are all safe. That said, the vaccine someone receives will depend on your age, where you live and where you are vaccinated. The AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, which has an overall effectiveness of 62%-vs >90% for Moderna and Pfizer, will be administered mostly through pharmacies and primary care clinics, as will the Johnson & Johnson vaccine (I suspect). This is the case because they both can be stored safely in a regular freezer (click here). The AstraZeneca vaccine is recommended for people between 18-64 years of age. The mRNA viruses (Pfizer/Moderna) are recommended for people over age 64 years. The advantages of getting a vaccine earlier (even if it’s a little less effective) outweigh waiting longer for a more effective vaccine. This is especially true since all vaccines seem to prevent death and severe COVID-19 complications. Emerging data show that the Astra-Zeneca vaccine is safe and effective in people over age 70 years (based on real-world data emerging from its use in the UK) (click here). In the recent US study it was over 90% effective in preventing severe COVID-19 and prevented death with 100% effectiveness!
FAQ 3) Which COVID-19 Vaccines have been approved by Health Canada? Currently Canada has 3 approved vaccines: Pfizer, Moderna, and Astra-Zeneca (as of last week). The Astra Zeneca vaccine was approved on Friday and may arrive as soon as Wednesday (click here). Canada is expecting 445,000 doses of this vaccine this week. The vaccine appears to prevent COVID-19 spread and severe COVID-19 pneumonia and death; however, it has the lowest effectiveness overall (62% protection).The J&J vaccine was just approved by the FDA in the USA (click here). It has not been approved in Canada yet but this is expected to occur in the next 2-3 weeks. The J&J vaccine has several advantages. In a study with people in 3 continents one dose of J&J was 85 per cent protective against the most severe COVID-19 illness and the safety profile was as good as other vaccines. The J&J vaccine is a single shot vaccine (unlike two shots for Pfizer and Moderna). In addition it can be stored in a simple office refrigerator, allowing it to be rapidly deployed in the community. The bottom line: All approved vaccines are protective against severe adverse outcomes and I would advise you to take the first vaccine you are offered!
FAQ 4) Does the vaccine work against new variants (mutations) in the SARS-CoV2 virus? Short answer is a qualified YES. The vaccines work albeit not quite as well for the variants. In the 144,000 participants in all randomized clinical trials of vaccines to date, those receiving any active vaccine had only 3 cases of severe COVID-19 (vs 37 in the control group). There were no deaths in people who were vaccinated with any of the vaccines versus 5 deaths in the control group. Even though absolute protection is slightly less for UK and South African variants the vaccines (including the AstraZeneca vaccine and J&J) prevent serious adverse outcomes (like hospitalization and death). Thus, despite variant viruses the vaccines are lifesavers!
FAQ 5) I’m on a blood thinner, can I be vaccinated for COVID-19? Short answer YES. Here is a more detailed answer from an Canadian agency with expertise on the use of blood thinners, Thrombosis Canada.
FAQ 6) I have a history of allergic reactions, can I be vaccinated for COVID-19? Short answer YES. Out of ~1.8 million vaccinations there have only been 21 reported episodes of anaphylaxis (the most serious type of allergic reaction). Most (70%) of these events occurred within 15 minutes of the vaccine (which is why you will be monitored for this period of time post vaccine). There were also 83 cases of non-anaphylaxis allergic reaction after Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccination with symptom onset within a 0–1-day risk window. Most (87%) of these allergic reactions were classified as nonserious. Thus, the risk of severe allergic reactions to the Pfizer vaccine are low and manageable. Allergy testing is NOT necessary prior to COVID-19 vaccination even in people with history of allergies. It is important note that none of the people who developed anaphylaxis after vaccination died and most did not have a prior history of anaphylaxis (see table below). The incidence of anaphylaxis is lower still with the Moderna vaccine.
The adverse effects of the COVID-19 vaccines in clinical trials are similar in vaccinated people vs people who got a placebo-saline injection except for: local pain at the vaccine site and increased muscle ache and headache, all of which were more common with the vaccine but were short-term (see below). This is a very good safety profile relative to other vaccines.
The CDC does advise against the use of the two mRNA vaccines for a very select group of people with the following allergy histories (click here):
- Severe allergic reaction (e.g., anaphylaxis) after a previous dose of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine or any of its components
- Immediate allergic reaction of any severity to a previous dose of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine or any of its components (including polyethylene glycol [PEG])*
- Immediate allergic reaction of any severity to polysorbate (due to potential cross-reactive hypersensitivity with the vaccine ingredient PEG)*
FAQ 7) I’m immunosuppressed, should I get vaccinated? This question has a less clear answer. First, be reassured is no virus (dead or alive) in the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines so it is not possible for a person to get infected from the vaccine. However immunosuppressed people were not included in the initial clinical trials. That said, they probably are safe to be vaccinated but this is more a matter of expert opinion. In Canada the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) currently advises that the COVID-19 vaccine should not be offered to populations excluded from clinical trials “until further evidence is available.” However, they also say “an immunosuppressed person or those with an autoimmune disorder can still be vaccinated if a risk assessment deems that the benefits of vaccine outweigh the potential risks for the individual.” (click here).
The British Society for Immunology recently issued a statement indicating that vaccination is safe in immunosuppressed people (click here), albeit the resulting immune response may be weaker. They remind us that because there is no virus in the vaccine there is absolutely no risk of acquiring COVID-19 from the vaccine. Dr. Mike Beyak (gastroenterology) nicely summarized evidence from a registry of ~4500 patients who were immunosuppressed for their inflammatory bowel diseases (Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis). There was no increased risk of contracting COVID-19 in these 4500 patients. Apart for patients on prednisone, there was also no increased complications from COVID-19 when it occurred. Interestingly, some biologic therapies (antibody treatments for IBD) actually appear to reduce adverse outcomes in IBD patients who contracted COVID-19. This is not surprising since the truly bad outcomes in COVID-19 seem to occur in people who mount a hyper-aggressive immune response. Overall these data are good news for our many patients with rheumatoid arthritis, asthma and IBD who are on immunosuppressive therapies. However, since these people were not included in the vaccine clinical trials, it is advised they consult the physicians/clinic that is managing their care to inform their vaccine decision.
FAQ 8) How long can I wait after my first dose to get a second vaccine dose? It appears a second dose at day 42 is as effective in producing a neutralizing antibody response as when the dose is given at day 21 (the normal interval from dose 1). This more lenient 42-day protocol has been approved by Health Canada.
FAQ 9) Can I get COVID-19 from the vaccines? This answer is simple-NO! None of the approved vaccines in Canada contain the virus itself. They do not contain live virus; they do not contain dead virus. Canada’s approved vaccines (from Pfizer and Moderna) contain only the messenger RNA (genetic code) to allow you cells to make the viral spike protein which then triggers your immune cells to build anti-spike antibodies which protect you. The Astra Zeneca vaccine is much the same but delivers the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein gene via a chimpanzee adenovirus-vector. Again, there is no virus (not dead; not alive) in this vaccine (click here). So, while you might get a sore arm or a fever from vaccination this is just your immune system responding as it should; there is no chance of getting COVID-19. Obviously one could contract COVID-19 around the time of vaccination the normal way, before the vaccination’s protection develops (i.e. in the first 2 weeks after vaccination).
FAQ 10) Are vaccines safe? Yes, serious adverse effects of vaccines are rare (occurring in only 167 of 1.4 million Canadians vaccinated). Most people get (at worst) sore arm at the injection site, fatigue, or fever, all signs the immune system is being activated. Based on the clinical trials and experience in millions of people who have been vaccinated world-wide we can be reassured of vaccine safety and efficacy. All the side effects (called adverse events and abbreviated AEFI) are tracked and reported by the government of Canada (see below). (click here) (last updated Feb 26th).
FAQ 11) Is it safe to increase the time span between dose 1 and 2 of the COVID-19 vaccine? Most vaccines are given with an initial dose and a booster dose 3 months later. The reason the COVID-19 vaccine regimen initially specified a shorter interval was simply the rapid pace of the clinical trials which compressed the vaccination interval. Regulators approved the vaccine based on the information that came from these trials. With time it is now clear that spacing out the interval up to 4 months is safe and effective. This longer interval between vaccines allows more people to get the first dose asap and as the data have shown, the first dose yields substantial immunity within 1-2 weeks. That said, once vaccines become more available it would be prudent to return to the initial interval between vaccine doses.
4) KFL&A COVID-19 rates rise by 69 cases since Monday-203 active cases in our part of SE Ontario (see update from KFL&A Public Health)
The total number of cases in KFL&A since the pandemic began is 909, not counting the prison outbreak. This is up 35 cases since Thursday and most new cases are caused by a variant of concern (i.e. mutant virus) (see below). There are 8 people hospitalized at KHSC. Only 3 are from our region; the other 5 are from Lakeridge/Scarborough.
Lanark Leeds Grenville has had a decrease in active cases to 104 cases. Hasting Prince Edwards County active case rate is up 3-fold from last week with 30 new active cases. Thus, with our 69 active cases there are 203 active cases in our part of SE Ontario, down from 242 last week. There are 15 active regional outbreaks (8 in schools). We have done 3062 COVID-19 tests at KHSC since Monday with 60 positive tests for a positive test rate of 2%. Of people tested from KFL&A, 1318 1.4% test positivity.
The rate of cases is rising rapidly in KFL&A (above) and more variant viruses are being detected (below)
The graph below shows our local 3rd wave of COVID-19 (courtesy of Dr. Gerald Evans) (original wave not on this graph).
There has only been one death of a KFL&A resident since the pandemic began. These data are a reminder that COVID-19 is actively spreading in our region and reminds is of the ongoing need for following public health measures remains extremely carefully.
5) Ontario infection rates are up from Monday with 2094 new cases yesterday. New and active cases are up 32% and 29%, respectively and Ontario’s case rate of positive tests has soared to 6.1% (click here) (click here).
Ontario’s COVID-19 hospitalization rate rises 13%
We have done 12.43 million COVID-19 test thus far. The rate of test positivity in Ontario is rising and is rising from 6.1% (see below), 3X the rate in KFL&A. Positive tests due to N501Y mutation variants account for most cases in Ontario. We are in a race to get vaccines into arms before the more infectious mutant virus causes a large 3rd wave. This is no time for vaccine hesitancy!
Ontario’s positive test rate rises to 6.1%
6) Canada’s COVID-19 epidemic: 30,466 new cases in the past week with a rise in new and active cases nationally of 23% and 21% plus a 3% increase in hospitalizations (click here) (click here).
A rise in new/active cases and hospitalizations raises concerns about the size of 3rd wave of COVID-19 March 29th 2021
There have been 22,894 COVID-19 deaths thus far and a cumulative national case mortality rate of 1.9%. Canada has performed ~28.1 million COVID-19 tests with a cumulative test positivity rate of 3.42%. Rates of COVID-19 are back to baseline in PEI. Rates of infection remain at a low plateau in all other provinces and territories, as a result of introduction of more aggressive public health measures; however, there is an upward trend in new cases developing in Alberta.
Wave 3: Although the orange line above (showing active cases) may not look concerning this is a matter of scale. If you look at the right end of the line you can see it turning upwards-evidence of the beginning of a 3rd wave. In addition the bottom panels continues to show a concerning rise in hospitalizations-March 29th 2021
Canada’s vaccination roll-out: 5.2 million vaccines administered thus far (11.9% of population) (click here): To date, 6,207,530 doses of COVID-19 vaccines (including Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Astra-Zeneca) have been delivered. Thus far, 83.8% of delivered doses have been administered. 668,596 Canadians are fully vaccinated (click here). Still, Canada is well back in the pack with only 11.9% of the population vaccinated (see below).
7) Canada is scheduled to receive ~3.3 million vaccines this week (a mixture of all 3 approved vaccine types) (click here). This includes 1.5 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford COVID-19 vaccine on loan from the U.S. will arrive in Canada by truck on Tuesday (click here).
8) The global pandemic: >127 million cases to date and new case rates on the rise (click here); up almost 2 million cases since Thursday!
There have been ~127 million cases since the pandemic began, up almost 2 million cases since Monday! There have been 2,787,288 deaths since the pandemic began. Active case rates are rising (orange graph above) but daily death rates are continuing to decline. This is a reminder of the need for global vaccination. We will not end this pandemic until the entire world has access to vaccines. Until then we will continue to have the development of mutant viruses that not only hurt the unvaccinated people but threaten to defeat the protection conferred by vaccination.
The USA, with 30.28 million cases and 549,538 deaths has roughly the same total number of cases as the next four most affected countries combined (India, Brazil, Russia and the United Kingdom). The USA has accounted for ~25 % of the global pandemic but things are improving rapidly in the USA, with over 130,000,000 vaccinations completed and a promise to have all Americans vaccinated by May. Also helping the US epidemic is natural immunity (due to infections) and better adherence to public health measures (in some states).
Americanow has a 4.6% positive test rate, down from 6% last Monday and better than Ontario (6.1%) for the first time! (click here; see below). Texas now has a positive test rate of 6.4% while South Dakota is down to 10% (small state-big fluctuations in rates-but still very high).
9) KHSC capacity is better with 75 beds available (including 14 intensive care beds)
The hospital has done a good job making bed space available for current and potential COVID-19 cases by discharging people when possible, operationalizing surgical inpatient beds at the Hotel Dieu site, and moving ALC people to other facilities-KUDOS team KHSC! We are down from >500 to 461 admitted people and 186 of them are on the Medicine service. We now have 75 beds available.
Reasonable critical care capacity at KHSC March 29th 2021
Meanwhile we continue to perform all possible elective care. As discussed in many prior notes I don’t view the care we provide as elective in the conventional sense. Most of the services provided at KHSC are time-sensitive and delays can worsen the quality and/or quantity of people lives. We main committed to continuing as much of our “elective” procedural and other care as is possible. We have opened new beds here at KHSC and Hotel Dieu, reactivating it as a site for inpatient care for surgical patients.
10) Improvement in COVID-19 in Ontario’s Long Term Care facilities (LTC)-evidence vaccines working: click here.
Most COVID-19 deaths occur in people who are not only old but who are also frail and live in nursing homes and LTC facilities. While LTC residents account for only 5.3% of all cases in Ontario, they account for 51.8% of all 7244 deaths in Ontario. As of today, the 3,753 deaths in nursing homes (NO DEATHS X 1 WEEK) account for ~57% of all deaths. There are 9 active COVID-19 cases in LTC residents and 119 active cases in LTC staff, the lowest numbers in months. These numbers continue to decline, which is very encouraging! For example a month ago we were seeing death rates of >100/week; now it is <5/week; still too many but heading in the right direction rapidly. The graph below shows the beneficial impact of the province’s decision to prioritize its limited initial vaccine supply of health care workers and residents of Ontario’s LTCs. Note the rapid decline in both staff (yellow) and resident (orange) COVID-19 case numbers coincident with vaccination!
Vaccines crush COVID-19 in LTCs (leaving this graphic in the note because it is such an awesome testimonial to the power of vaccines in vulnerable people)
11) Increased COVID-19 in school age children: (click here). Teenagers and young adults are the demographic most likely to be infected by SARS-CoV-2 but in general are less severely affected. Young children are less likely to get infected and when infected are less infectious (perhaps because they are less sick). My hope is that children will be approved for vaccination by the fall but research proving safety and efficacy are pending, as discussed above (click here). With more kids back in school we are seeing more infections (although not at alarming rates).
There have been 9053 students with COVID-19 since the pandemic began with 1738 new cases in the past 2 weeks (see below). This is a continued increase compared to last week, consistent with more young people being back in school. 23% of Ontario schools have reported at least one active case (see below). This reflects a growing instability in the school system’s ability to deal with wave 3 of COVID-19. It is also why studies examining vaccination of children are crucial! We need to vaccinate children to stop disease transmission!
Things are better in the toddler age group. Here are the parallel data from licensed child care facilities in Ontario-where there have been 1906 children infected since the pandemic began, 350 new cases in the past 2). This relatively stable number of infections in the licensed child care facilities is a reminder that it is the older school age children (>10 years old) not the toddlers, who are contracting COVID-19 most often.
Regular reminders-On hiatus today
Final thoughts: There is a 3rd wave of COVID-19 rising in KFL&A, Ontario, in Canada and globally. While we need to follow public health guidance, getting the vaccine as soon as it is offered is the key to returning to a pre-COVID-19 world.Taking the vaccine is safe and it’s the right thing to do. I am one of the 520,000,000 people globally that have been vaccinated. It was an experience like all other vaccines I have had (uneventful). I recommend that when you are called you confidently roll up your sleeve and help us end the pandemic! I would also advise taking whatever vaccine you are offered because the benefits in preventing severe adverse outcomes (death and mechanical ventilation) are provided by all approved vaccines. The Astra Zeneca vaccine is safe and effective. You can now book your vaccine on line if you are over age 80 years (click here).! We will soon be vaccinating those over age 70 years. In addition by “going earlier” (rather than waiting for your vaccine of choice) you are accelerating the creation of herd immunity and protecting the public at large. Vaccine hesitancy puts you and your loved ones at unnecessary risk. Join me and take your shot like Canada’s own Alphonso Davies, Bayern Munich fullback and 2020 rookie of the year!
Stay well!