Quebec to Begin Inoculating Against COVID-19 as First Vaccines Arrive

Quebec to Begin Inoculating Against COVID-19 as First Vaccines Arrive
Horacio Arruda, Quebec director of National Public Health responds to reporters during a news conference on the COVID-19 pandemic, at the legislature in Quebec City, on April 16, 2020. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)
The Canadian Press
12/14/2020
Updated:
12/14/2020

MONTREAL—Public health officials in Quebec plan to administer the first COVID-19 vaccines today.

Residents of two long-term care homes in the province will be the first to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

Francine Dupuis of the Montreal regional health agency says health-care workers have been ready to administer the doses at Maimonides Geriatric Centre since Friday.

Dupuis says the agency expects to receive 1,950 initial doses, which will first go to residents, to Maimonides staff and then to health-care workers in other long-term care homes.

In Quebec City, residents of the Saint-Antoine long-term care home will receive the vaccine first, followed by health-care workers at that facility.

Officials say they hope the vaccine will help protect the most vulnerable people in the province while bringing the pandemic under control.

Quebec reported 1,994 new cases of COVID-19 on Sunday, as well as 33 additional deaths linked to the virus—bringing its total to 163,915 infections and 7,508 deaths since the pandemic began.