Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine delay will affect inoculation schedule in Alberta
Dr. Laura McDougall, senior medical officer of health at Alberta Health Services, said delays in shipments from pharmaceutical company Pfizer means some some health-care workers may not get their second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, and other people might have to wait longer to get their first shot.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Trudeau admits vaccine effort has lagged
cbc.ca
-
Laura Walker and Team Alberta eliminate Jennifer Jones and Team Manitoba at Scotties
cbc.ca
-
Tranquil flurries fill the driveways in Stittsville, ON
The Weather Network
-
'By protecting the most vulnerable...we protect everyone': Joe Cressy, chair of Toronto's Board of Health
cbc.ca
-
Michael Kovrig’s wife says she hopes Biden’s ‘powerful’ words will lead to action
Global News
-
Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami captures super-G overall title
cbc.ca
-
U.S. approves Johnson & Johnson’s singe-shot COVID-19 vaccine
Global News
-
Ontario pumps so-called “emergency brakes” placing two regions in lockdown
Global News
-
China's ambassador to Canada dismisses accusations of Uighur genocide
cbc.ca
-
Graphic Warning: Austria's Rosina Schneeberger crashes during Sunday's World Cup
cbc.ca
-
Graphic Warning: Norway's Kajsa Vickhoff Lie crashes during Sunday's World Cup super-G race
cbc.ca
-
A community rallies for one of its own
CityNews
-
This is how Canadians celebrate the roaring game
cbc.ca
-
First COVID-19 vaccine doses from COVAX arrive in Africa
Global News
-
U.S. approves Johnson & Johnson's singe-shot COVID-19 vaccine
Global News
-
Lillian Bayne daughter of Dr. Ronald Bayne
cbc.ca