Ottawa issues new COVID vaccine guidance, provinces now responsible for purchase

2 hours ago 13

Feds recommend those 80 and older, residents of long-term care homes and the immunocompromised get two doses of the vaccine per year

Author of the article:

The Canadian Press

The Canadian Press

Nicole Ireland

Published Jan 10, 2025  •  2 minute read

vaccineA pharmacist holds a COVID-19 vaccine at a pharmacy in New York on Sept. 24, 2024. Photo by Mary Conlon /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TORONTO — Federal funding for COVID-19 vaccines will stop this year, and the provinces and territories will be responsible for buying them, as well as determining the timing of the vaccinations, the Public Health Agency of Canada says.

The agency published the information online on Friday, along with the National Advisory Committee on Immunization’s COVID-19 vaccine guidance for 2025 through to the summer of 2026.

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NACI recommended that seniors who are 80 years and older, residents of long-term care homes, and adults and children six months and older who are moderately to severely immunocompromised should get two doses of COVID-19 vaccine per year.

It also recommended that all adults 65 years and older, health-care workers and people at higher risk of severe COVID-19 illness should get one shot a year if they’ve previously been vaccinated.

People considered at higher risk include those with underlying medical conditions; pregnant women; people from First Nations, Inuit and Metis communities; and members of racialized communities, NACI said.

In all cases, the most up-to-date COVID-19 vaccine should be used, it said.

Those who have never received a COVID-19 vaccine can get their first two-dose series any time because the virus that causes the disease — SARS-CoV-2 — is around throughout the year, NACI said.

“Unlike influenza, SARS-CoV-2 has been circulating year-round, without a clear pattern in disease activity,” the advisory committee said. “However, since 2022, COVID-19 activity has consistently been higher from late summer to early January, coinciding with the fall/winter respiratory season.”

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If significant new strains are identified in 2025, health authorities may authorize updates to the COVID-19 vaccine to match, NACI said.

The most recent mRNA vaccines, manufactured by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, target the KP.2 Omicron subvariant.

Novavax’s updated protein-based vaccine targets the JN.1 subvariant of Omicron, but the federal government did not buy any doses, saying the minimum order required was much higher than the Canadian uptake of the Novavax vaccine the previous year.

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