Quebec hospitals to start administering new Pfizer drug to high-risk COVID-19 patients - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec hospitals to start administering new Pfizer drug to high-risk COVID-19 patients

Quebec will receive 6,300 treatments of the sought-after antiviral drugPaxlovid, but that's not enough to ease the burden that the latest wave of COVID-19 is imposing on hospitals, which are readying more radical ways to prioritize patient care.

Health officials say 6,300 treatments of Paxlovid are on their way, province to receive 19,000 more in March

Associate Deputy Health Minister Dr. Lucie Opatrny said Quebec has come up with a plan to prioritize care as hospitals become overburdened. (Radio-Canada)

Quebec will begin receivingthe sought-after antiviral drugPaxlovid, but not quickly enoughto ease the heavy burden that the latest wave of COVID-19 is imposing on hospitals, which are readying more radical ways to prioritize patient care.

About 6,300 treatmentsof the drug will be delivered tothe provincethis week, with thousands more set to arrive in the coming month.

The medication developed by Pfizer, lauded for its potentialto reduce hospitalizations from the virus,was approved for emergency use by Health Canada yesterday.

The drug's arrival is being welcomed by health officials in Quebec, as hospitals are beingoverwhelmed by the number of COVID-19 patients infected bythe highly contagious Omicron variant.

At an update on the pandemic situation in the province Tuesday, Health Minister Christian Dub said the treatments aren'texpected to reduce the pressure on hospital bedsimmediately.

"We are at the end of the rope,"Dub said."Our best weapon remains vaccination."

Dub said it's still too early to relax pandemic restrictions, given the state hospitals are in.

89 deaths reported Tuesday

There area staggering 3,417 COVID-19 patients in Quebec hospitals on Tuesday.That's unprecedented.Butwhile hospitalizations are still climbing,the rate of increase is beginning to slow,said interim Public Health Director Dr. Luc Boileau.

"This disease will not disappear anytime soon. It's going to be with us for a while," Boileau said.

There were also 89 deaths reported in the province Tuesday, one of the highest daily death counts since a majority of Quebecerswerevaccinated.

Boileau said doctors have said the numbers don't reflect what they are seeing, andhealth officials are looking into what's going on. He said statisticians want to understand whether the deaths are of people who died because of the virus or who happened to haveCOVID-19 when they died.

Quebec records more COVID-19 deaths than other provinces, Boileausaid, not because the virus has necessarily killed so many more people herebut because the government has found ways to detect more of the people who died.

'How can we do more with what we have?'

The chair of Quebec's COVID-19 ethics committee, Marie-ve Bouthillier, and other senior health officials outlined their latest contingency planfor managing patient care in a separate media briefingTuesday afternoon.

The plan rotates aroundfour main axes. The first allows hospitals to findmore resources by doing less to restrict the spread of COVID-19 such as reducing isolation times for asymptomatic staff who test positive, or allowing recovered COVID patients onto wings that have outbreaks.

The second is to find ways to shorten all hospital stays.

The third is to find ways for COVID-19 patients to be treated at home.Opatrny said Montreal'sJewish General Hospital, for example, is already experimenting with providing some COVID-19 outpatients with milder respiratory symptoms with oxygen machines.

The final axis is a guide to reducing the intensity or standard of care.

"It's about if we can't provide all patients with A+ care, how can we slightly reduce that standard," while still caring for everyone, Opatrny said. "How can we do more with what we have?"

The plan, which was drafted by a team of 30 experts, also recommends relying more on primary caregivers and even, if needed, volunteers, as well as putting more of a burden on emergency departments to free up hospital beds.

One of those experts, Dr Hoang Duong, the president of Quebec's association of internal medicine specialists, said hospitals still aren't at the point of lowering the quality of care.

"The purpose is to be prepared for any eventuality," Duong said. "Our health-care system is under pressure, but we're not there yet."

He said though the plan may appear alarming, it is the ethical way of preparing for a period of low resources and of recognizing that there is a crisis.

"This isharm reduction," he said.

Paxlovid to immunocompromised, first

According to health officials, Paxlovid will be used to treat those who have mild to moderate symptoms of COVID-19but risk developing a severe form of the disease.

The drugwill be given only to patients18 years and olderwho are immunocompromised, such as cancer patients or those who have had organ transplants, as well as to thosewith seriousconditions who cannot bevaccinated.

Quebec health officials hope Pfizer's COVID-19 pill will help reduce hospitalizations. (Pfizer/Reuters)

By March, the province says, it's expecting to get about 19,000 treatments. At that point, it could be offered to more patients, not just those who are immunocompromised.

Associate Deputy Health Minister Dr. Lucie Opatrny said Quebec has come up with a plan to prioritize care as hospitals become overburdened. (Radio-Canada)

Each cycle of treatment is 30 pills, taken orally: three pills, twice a day, for five days.

Another challenge is supplying the entire province, especially places where there aren't hospitals. To do so, the government will partner with 50 to 60 local pharmacies thatwill stock the drug.

Health officials say there are challenges to administering it. The drug mustbe takenwithin five days of symptoms appearing.

After several months of clinical trials, Pfizer had reported in November that Paxlovid reduced the risk of hospitalization or death by an impressive 89 per cent compared with a placebo in non-hospitalized high-risk adults with COVID-19.

With files from Simon Nakonechny

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