As Sask. prepares to lift COVID-19 health restrictions, vaccination booster rates drop - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:50 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
SaskatchewanAnalysis

As Sask. prepares to lift COVID-19 health restrictions, vaccination booster rates drop

Saskatchewan now limits the data it shares on vaccinations and other key COVID-19 metrics in the province.

Provincial policy decisions are to blame for declining vaccination rates, says epidemiologist

A man with a mask and blue gloves holds a syringe in his hand.
The rate of COVID-19 booster vaccines being administered in Saskatchewan has continued to drop. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

As Saskatchewan prepares to liftall COVID-19 health restrictions on Feb. 28, the number ofvaccines being administered is declining.

The rates offirst and second doses has fallen to a trickle, while third and fourth doses one of the few areas where Saskatchewan was continuing to see large increases over the past few monthshavealso slowed.

The lack of coverage exposes more people to a chance of developing severe COVID-19 symptoms, saidNazeem Muhajarine,an epidemiologist at the University of Saskatchewan.

As of Feb. 13, Health Canada reported466,787 people in Saskatchewanhad at least one booster dose.That's42.17 per cent of the more than 1.1million people above the age of fivewho are eligible to receive a booster dose.

Alberta is the only province with a lower vaccine coverage rate, sitting at 36.55 per cent of itseligible population.

The national average is 46.32 per cent.

A reflection of government policy

Muhajarine points to two decisions made by the provincial government as a reason for falling vaccine uptake:

  • Premier Scott Moe's false claims that the vaccines no longer reduced the chance of transmission.
  • The decision for the province to drop its vaccine passport on Feb.14.

"It's no surprise" rates are falling, Muhajarine said, adding the numbers go hand-in-hand with policy.

Theepidemiologist said the vaccine policy helped boost uptake earlier in the pandemic.

Vaccinations increased when Saskatchewan announced a proof of vaccination policy in Septemberand then saw another spike when vaccine eligibility opened up to children in November.

Muhajarine saidits important to continue encouraging everyone to get as many shots as possible.

One of the areas that the province could focus on ischildren aged five to 11.

Before the province stopped reporting vaccination rates by age on Feb. 7, the rate of uptake in that age group was lower than the general population.

Another option is tohold direct conversations between experts and those who remain vaccine hesitant.

"We need to get to those kinds of very specific ways of encouraging people with science based information to get a vaccine dose," Muhajarine said.

A changing picture of vaccination

Saskatchewan once led Canada in terms of booster doses.

But things are changing.

At the province'speak of administering booster doses,between Dec. 15and Dec. 21, Saskatchewan put 58,000shots in arms.

The uptake has only dropped off from there.

The most recent data provided by the province showed thatbetweenFeb. 6 and Feb. 12, the province administered just 11,051 COVID-19 booster doses.

Administration of unvaccinated individuals getting their first doses in the province is even slower.

Only4,637 people receiveda first or second doses betweenFeb. 6 and Feb. 12.

The drop in vaccine rates comesdespite the continued urging from experts and scientists that getting a booster dose is important during the ongoing Omicron-variant-driven wave.

Vaccination does work and it reduces transmission and the effects of the virus, experts say.

WATCH | Blue SkyQ&A on COVID-19 with a clinical microbiologist:

During a recent Q&A with CBC News' Blue Sky,microbiologist Dr. Joseph Blondeausaid global data shows that although receiving a booster dose isn't a guarantee against infection it will likely help people avoid ending up in the hospital.

"Clearly being vaccinated and then having the additional booster doses goes a long way to protecting you from hospitalization and from death,"Blondeau said.

"I would be remiss if I didn't report that, you know, among those that were hospitalized and died, the vast majority of those individuals sadly were unvaccinated."

Lack of data

Muhajarine said another thing the province could do to increase the rateCOVID-19 boosters is to be transparent with data in the province.

There's a distinct lack of up-to-date data on COVID-19 in the province and the informationthat is available is not as useful as materialshared earlier in the pandemic.

Currently,Saskatchewan and Newfoundland are the onlyregions in the country that do not release data onCOVID-19 vaccinations on a regular basis.

Alberta provides COVID-19 data, including on boosters, on a daily basis by both provincial and local geographic areas.

Quebec and Ontario release COVID-19 data daily, with the booster data broken down by age and health region.

Manitoba provides the same data but does it every week day.

Meanwhile, Saskatchewan's weekly reportsno longer provideseparate tallies of third or fourth doses that have been administered.Instead, the two figures are aggregated.

Data broken down by age group is not provided in the weekly reports.

Health Canada does report the total number of people in Saskatchewan who have had a third dose, but doesn't report fourth doses.

The data reported by both the provincial governmentin its weekly reports and collected by thePublic Health Agency of Canada on its websiteisout of date, ranging from a few days to more than a week.

But the latest numbersshowa concerning trend.

Saskatchewan has now dropped well below the national average for percentage of the eligible population with a single booster dose.

Muhajarine saidthe province needs to go back to regularly reporting the data it collects.

"To prematurely pivot to less frequent and less complete data reporting in Saskatchewan is, it's really unconscionable," he said.

With files from CBC News' Blue Sky