Waterloo Region is now accepting requests for an earlier appointment for a second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine from highest-risk health care workers. These highest-risk health care workers were identified by the Province for a shortened interval between first and second doses of the vaccine.
“The Waterloo Region Vaccine Distribution Task Force is committed to balancing the priority of getting first doses in arms as quickly as possible with the priority to get second doses to those identified by the Province as being at highest risk,” said Shirley Hilton, Deputy Chief for Waterloo Region Police Service and Lead of the Waterloo Region Vaccine Distribution Task Force. “With more vaccine on the way, we’ll be increasing our capacity at our vaccination clinics in the weeks ahead.”
KITCHENER Highest-risk health-care workers in the Waterloo Region are now eligible for a shorter interval between their first and second COVID-19 vaccine doses. “The Waterloo Region Vaccine Distribution Task Force is committed to balancing the priority of getting first doses in arms as quickly as possible with the priority to get second doses to those identified by the Province as being at highest risk,” Dept. Chief Shirley Hilton said in a press release. “With more vaccine on the way, we’ll be increasing our capacity at our vaccination clinics in the weeks ahead.” Anyone in that group with a second dose appointment scheduled between now and June 14 should keep their original appointment. Anyone else meeting the eligibility requirements can complete a form on the region s website so they can get their second dose sooner.
Rapid tests up Zimbabwe s COVID-19 diagnosis – The Zimbabwe Mail thezimbabwemail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thezimbabwemail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
05/14/2021 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/14/2021 10:45
Rapid tests up Zimbabweâs COVID-19 diagnosis
Rapid tests up Zimbabwe s COVID-19 diagnosis
14 May 2021
Harare - Zimbabwe has upscaled the use of antigen rapid diagnostic teststo reinforce its COVID-19 response, hitting a daily rate of 4000 tests - a fourfold increase reached within just two months after the method was launched in November 2020.
The rapid tests have been a game changer, according to Dr Raiva Simbi, the Deputy Director Laboratory Services at the Ministry of Health and Child Care. Initially COVID-19 tests were done through the standard polymerase chain reaction in a major laboratory in the capital Harare and later decentralized to the provinces. Even then this was hamstrung by shortages in the supply of reagents due to global competition and longer turn-around time for tests results.