Fitzgerald pleads with doctors for help with N.L. COVID-19 booster campaign
Chief medical officer of health says public health capacity is 'strained'
Newfoundland and Labrador's chief medical officer of health is asking physicians to help with the COVID-19 booster vaccination campaign as public health contends with a surge of cases driven by the Omicron variant.
In a letter sent to physicians Monday, Dr. Janice Fitzgerald said the booster dose is an effective tool for combating COVID-19 — particularly the Omicron variant — but the province's vaccination system needs help getting the shot into arms.
"Public health capacity is strained due to case and contact management and the ongoing pediatric vaccination campaign," she said. "Therefore, I am requesting your support to administer booster doses to eligible members of the population."
In her letter, Fitzgerald said physicians can choose to administer the vaccine in their own clinic, their own mass clinics or in mass clinics set up by the regional health authorities.
The Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association declined an interview Tuesday, but in a statement spokesperson Jonathan Carpenter said the association is happy to support the accelerated campaign.
"We are sure many doctors will participate," Carpenter said. "Of course doctors also have to balance other important services they provide to patients as well."
In a statement Wednesday, Yvette Coffey, president of the Registered Nurses' Union Newfoundland and Labrador, said registered nurses are facing "significant pressure" due to contact tracing and the vaccination campaign.
Coffey said the union is aware regional health authorities are looking for additional help with the clinics.
"This wave of cases couldn't come at a harder time. Registered nurses are mentally and physically exhausted. Like everyone, our members were looking forward to the holidays and having even a brief opportunity to recharge," Coffey said.
According to the Department of Health, as of Monday, 28,184 people in Newfoundland and Labrador had received a booster.
Pharmacies struggling to meet demand
After the first vaccination campaign, which saw more than 92 per cent of the N.L. population ages 12 and up get vaccinated, the mass clinics began to wind down.
Pharmacies have been tasked with administering booster doses while mass vaccination clinics ramp up again. Long lines formed outside some pharmacies Monday and Tuesday, as many scrambled to get a booster.
Supply is also strained, with 170,000 people now eligible to receive the vaccine after the booster timeline was reduced from six months to 22 weeks.
"The supply is improving. Last week was very tough to try and get any," Janice Audeau, president of the Pharmacists Association of Newfoundland and Labrador, told CBC on Tuesday. "There was an additional 20,000 doses of vaccine that arrived in the province on Saturday, and those have been distributed through each of the [regional health authorities] and now making their way into pharmacies."
Audeau said more doses of the vaccine are expected either Tuesday or Wednesday.
The National Advisory Committee of Immunization recommends people aged 18 to 29 receive a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine over the Moderna vaccine as a booster. Those ages 30 and up may receive either vaccine.
In her letter, Fitzgerald said the Pfizer vaccine will not be available for physicians to administer due to limited supply, and people ages 18 to 29 should be referred to public health clinics instead.
As of Tuesday, Newfoundland and Labrador has avoided the record numbers of COVID-19 cases being reported across the country, but totals are creeping up. The province currently has 175 active cases, though there are no hospitalizations.
Dr. Fitzgerald and Health Minister John Haggie will hold a COVID-19 briefing at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, the last one planned before Christmas.