How Canadians will know when it's their turn to get vaccinated

春夏秋鼕

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Who is getting vaccinated first?​

For the first phase of the vaccine rollout plan, NACI advised that initial doses should go to these four groups:

  • Residents and staff of long-term care homes.
  • Adults 70 and older, beginning with people 80 and older, then decreasing by five-year increments to 70 as supply becomes available.
  • Health-care workers, including all those who work in clinical settings, and personal support workers who come in direct contact with patients.
  • Adults in Indigenous communities, where infection can have disproportionate consequences.
priority-vaccine-canada.jpg

For Phase 2 of the vaccination rollout, NACI recommended that recipients include:

  • Health-care workers who are not part of the initial rollout.
  • Residents and staff of all other congregate settings (e.g., living quarters for migrant workers, correctional facilities, homeless shelters).
  • Essential workers, including police, firefighters and those in food production.
Provincial and territorial governments may make modifications to that list. For example, Alberta's plan separates the first phase into Phase 1A and Phase 1B — with First Nations, Métis and persons 65 years of age and over living in a First Nations community or Métis Settlement not getting the vaccine until the second half of the first stage.

In Quebec, it was recently decided that caregivers over the age of 70 who visit residential and long-term care homes at least three times a week will be added to the high-priority group.

As for Phase 2, many regions have not yet prioritized who will be eligible or defined who will be considered an essential worker.

The first phase is expected to wrap up for many provinces by the end of March, while the second phase could last into mid-summer.
 
看来大多数普通人应该是phase3了。
 
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