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And maybe a million appointments?
Or does that not fit your preconceived notion?
Or does that not fit your preconceived notion?
Of course.And maybe a million appointments?
Or does that not fit your preconceived notion?
Ontario vaccinated 57 thousand people today.I've got to admit, I'm getting somewhat peeved and I actually have an appointment to be vaccinated next week.
On the other hand, the US administered more than 4 million doses in the last 24 hours while here in Middlesex county and London combined there are only five vaccination clinics and (as of last Monday) two pharmacies administering vaccine for some 450,000 folks.
Blame the Feds all you like, but if Quebec and Alberta are well ahead using the same system, and same metrics, it's probably not them.We set up an appointment system for a reason and a damn good reason. Not Ontario fault the Federal Govt is so woefully inept we had to steal from 3rd world countries.
Ontario vaccinated 57 thousand people today.
Quebec did 47 thousand.
Sad.
UK is producing the AZ in massive numbers, USA is producing the Pfizer and Moderna in massive numbers.I wasn't knocking Ontario so much but was considering my county as representative of Canada on a whole. If the CBC's data can be believed, Canada's one dose rate now averages 14.43% while Ontario's stands at 14.27, Quebec's at 17.36, Alta at 12.4 and NS at 8.36. Meanwhile the UK is at 47.1% (but most of Europe is just a bit behind Canada in the 10-13% area) and the US at 30.7% and with 17.5 fully two dose vaccinated (Canada at 1.85%)
We clearly on a par with the highly bureaucratic European community when it comes to acquiring and distributing these vaccines and fall well behind our British and American cousins. Hard to believe that the British health system is outperforming us.
Are you suggesting folks who made appointments according to things like transportation, essential work hours, day care are just outta luck so that stay at home people can just walk right up and grab your shot?If we as a province have a million vaccines in freezers and out 57k in arms yesterday, that’s a huge fail. Even allowing for it as a ‘slow’ day, there’s no justification for having two weeks’ worth stockpiled. Get the goddamned needles into arms. They’re letting perfect be the enemy of good enough. This is one of those “better a good plan, immediately and violently executed, than a perfect plan too late” circumstances.
Ontario had 985k yesterday and doled out 57k so 928k.If we as a province have a million vaccines in freezers and out 57k in arms yesterday, that’s a huge fail. Even allowing for it as a ‘slow’ day, there’s no justification for having two weeks’ worth stockpiled. Get the goddamned needles into arms. They’re letting perfect be the enemy of good enough. This is one of those “better a good plan, immediately and violently executed, than a perfect plan too late” circumstances.
I'm suggesting that whatever Alberta is doing, or Quebec, or British Columbia, Ontario just adopt that.Are you suggesting folks who made appointments according to things like transportation, essential work hours, day care are just outta luck so that stay at home people can just walk right up and grab your shot?
Shots in arms. As fast as supply allows. Between family doctors, paramedics, pharmacists, nurses, veterinarians, there are a ton of people who can, in these exigent circumstances, administer vaccines. We save our ICUs by maximizing innoculation and disrupting transmission chains. Close schools for three days and offer a shot to every teacher and EA who wants one. Roll ambulances to jails and precincts and offer shots to every cop or CO coming off shift. Do the same for grocery stores, pharmacies, warehouses, and communal residences. Offer and fund a day’s paid vaccine leave, and obligate employers to release employees for a day for the purpose of getting a shot.Are you suggesting folks who made appointments according to things like transportation, essential work hours, day care are just outta luck so that stay at home people can just walk right up and grab your shot?
I'm suggesting that whatever Alberta is doing, or Quebec, or British Columbia, Ontario just adopt that.
So AB has 12.4% population at one-shot and Ontario has 14.3% by CBC’s numbers.I'm suggesting that whatever Alberta is doing, or Quebec, or British Columbia, Ontario just adopt that.
I don’t think measuring provinces against each other is particularly useful. The benchmark should be what has been delivered within a province versus what has arrived and could have been delivered. Evaluate Alberta within Alberta, Ontario within Ontario. The provinces should be a conduit to immunize as fast as the feds can deliver shots. Attempts at precision and specificity in delivery appear to be slowing things unduly.So AB has 12.4% population at one-shot and Ontario has 14.3% by CBC’s numbers.
So Altair’s horrible Ontario actually has a greater percentage of citizens vaccinated at this point than the Alberta he crows about. So Ontario needs to be 1.9% worse to be as good as the better?
Alberta has gotten less vaccines per percentage of population.So AB has 12.4% population at one-shot and Ontario has 14.3% by CBC’s numbers.
So Altair’s horrible Ontario actually has a greater percentage of citizens vaccinated at this point than the Alberta he crows about. So Ontario needs to be 1.9% worse to be as good as the better?
We clearly on a par with the highly bureaucratic European community when it comes to acquiring and distributing these vaccines and fall well behind our British and American cousins. Hard to believe that the British health system is outperforming us.