COVID-19 vaccinations in Saskatchewan to be expanded to first responders

First responders in Saskatchewan, including police officers, firefighters and public health inspectors are to be prioritized for COVID-19 vaccinations.

However, the province says it could be two weeks before those start.

Mobile vaccination units are currently targeting select congregate living settings including group home and shelter staff and residents.

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Regina drive-thru vaccine clinic open to 50-year-olds

Once complete, officials say the mobile units will then turn to first responders.

“As we continue to make great progress in our vaccine delivery, we are able to utilize our mobile vaccination unit capacity to target those first responders that are assisting in enforcement of our public health orders,” Health Minister Paul Merriman said in a statement Monday.

“These mobile units will be dispatched to central workplaces of these first responders and will operate without compromising our mass vaccination capacity that exists in our age-based vaccine delivery.”

However, vaccination of Regina police officers started this past weekend at the drive-thru site at Evraz Place as COVID-19 variants of concern are a predominant worry in the regions, health officials said.

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Overview of Saskatchewan’s COVID-19 vaccination plan

The province is also allocating unused vaccines from the Phase 1 delivery to health-care workers.

Health officials said of the 40,500 priority vaccinations allocated for Phase 1, 27,348 — 67 per cent — first doses were administered.

The rest of the doses will be allocated to the remaining front-line health care workers not included in Phase 1, the province said, adding all doctors will be included in the priority sequencing.

Physicians are being added as they may be called on to assist in clinical care and surge capacity needs, officials said.

They added that eligible doctors will receive a letter from the College of Physicians and Surgeons and eligible health-care workers will receive a letter from the Saskatchewan Health Authority.

The letters will provide details on how to book their vaccination appointment.

Read more:
Sask. pharmacies to administer vaccines by mid-April: health minister

Pharmacies, meanwhile, are being tasked to pharmacy and grocery store staff when they start delivering vaccines, which is set as the week of April 26.

“As pharmacies begin delivering the COVID-19 vaccine, we know there will be an increased risk of exposure to those frontline staff working in those facilities,” Merriman said.

“By making the COVID-19 vaccine available to staff working in the pharmacy or attached grocery spaces through the pharmacists delivering the vaccine, these workers will be protected.”

Proof of employment will be required by the pharmacy, health officials said.

They added staff working at a facility where vaccinations are taking place are eligible to receive their shot at that facility.


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