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Jo-Anne Miner receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic in Ottawa, on Dec. 15, 2020.POOL/Reuters

At 8:05 a.m. on a cold, cloudless day, personal support worker Jo-Anne Miner became the first person of 1.4 million in the Ottawa-Gatineau area to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, hours before the federal government announced that hundreds of thousands more doses would reach Canadian soil by the end of the year.

Frigid boxes holding a fraction of the up to 417,000 vaccine doses set to arrive by the end of the month touched down in at least six provinces Tuesday, while Alberta and B.C. prepared to administer the medicine to health workers for the first time that afternoon.

Miner is part of the legions of front-line staff and seniors-home residents slated for inoculation across the country this month amid a surging second wave.

“This will help create a safe space for me, my colleagues and the residents,” she said in a release from the Ottawa Hospital’s Civic campus, where 3,000 doses of the vaccine from Pfizer and its partner BioNTech sit in ultracold storage – enough for 1,500 people to get the two doses needed for maximum protection.

“It has been a challenging year for so many people living and working in long-term care.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Health Minister Patty Hajdu met with care workers at the hospital Tuesday morning to thank them and witness the city’s inaugural inoculations.

These followed historic needle jabs in Toronto, Montreal and Quebec City on Monday after the first doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine arrived in Canada Sunday evening.

“It’s very moving, very emotional. I’ve been emotional for two days,” Hajdu told reporters.

“The light is shining, now we can actually see it,” she said.

“This is a good day,” Trudeau added.

The prime minister announced Tuesday that Canada has signed a contract to receive up to 168,000 doses of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine by the end of December, ahead of their planned January arrival and part of 40 million Moderna doses Ottawa has secured for delivery by the end of 2021.

The Moderna vaccine has not yet been approved by Health Canada, but Trudeau said deliveries could begin within 48 hours of it getting the green light.

Canada is also set to receive about 200,000 of its total early shipment of Pfizer-BioNTech doses next week, on top of 30,000 this week. They are bound for 70 distribution sites across the country – up from 14 now – where the vaccine can be administered.

“That’s not going to be enough to extinguish any fires,” said chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam, but the incoming vaccines give her “great hope,” she added.

“I’m definitely looking forward to 2021 being a better year.”

Health workers in all 10 provinces prepared to roll up their arms this week.

They were slated to start immunization in Manitoba on Wednesday, while Saskatchewan was on track to see nearly 2,000 doses roll off the tarmac Tuesday.

Shipments touched down in all four Atlantic provinces Tuesday, with all but New Brunswick gearing up to begin immunizations Wednesday.

The injections come as case counts keep rising.

Ontario reported 2,275 new coronavirus cases and 20 more deaths on Tuesday. The case tally marks a single-day record, but is partly due to a change in the province’s data extraction time that produced a “one-time increase,” according to Public Health Ontario.

More than half the new cases are in Toronto and neighbouring Peel Region.

Some 134 of the province’s 626 long-term care homes are experiencing coronavirus outbreaks, with 695 residents infected and one new death reported Tuesday, provincial health officials said.

Quebec reported 1,741 new cases – nearly one-third of them in Montreal – and 39 more deaths on Tuesday.

As of Tuesday afternoon, 370,238 people in Canada have been infected, and 12,032 have died.

Enough vaccine doses are set to start arriving in April for provinces to expand the vaccination program beyond the initial priority groups. Canada expects to be able to vaccinate every Canadian who wants an inoculation by the end of September 2021.

Moderna’s vaccine can be stored at -20 C, compared to -70 C for Pfizer’s, making it more easily transportable to remote areas.

“Doses of this vaccine will be directed to the North as well as to remote and Indigenous communities,” Trudeau said.

The three territories are scheduled to start receiving vials “in the coming” weeks, with medical-grade freezers already shipped, he added.

Dr. Supriya Sharma, chief medical adviser at Health Canada, says there are still some outstanding manufacturing documents needed from Moderna before authorities can approve its product.

The timeline for finishing up reviews of two more vaccines is less certain. The vaccine candidate from AstraZeneca potentially needs more study before Health Canada is ready to make a decision, and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine candidate’s review is still in the early stages.

Health Canada approved the vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech on Dec. 9.

Authorities are still calling on Canadians to keep two metres apart from each other, wear face masks and practise careful hygiene to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.

In Ottawa, nurse Venus Lucero took stock shortly after injecting a dose into Miner’s tattooed arm.

“I just feel great enthusiasm by being part of the solution to this ongoing pandemic that we have,” she said.

“It’s part of history, I would say.”

The first doses of the Pfizer-BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Atlantic Canada Tuesday and Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador said they would begin inoculating their citizens as early as Wednesday.

New Brunswick, meanwhile, said its first vaccine clinic will open over the weekend. All four Atlantic provinces received a first shipment of 1,950 doses.

The first COVID-19 vaccine injections in Canada were administered in Toronto and Quebec City within half an hour of each other on Monday. Personal support worker Anita Quidangen was the first in Ontario to get the shot.

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