Global National: Dec. 13, 2020 | First doses of Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine arrive in Canada

Global News published this video item, entitled “Global National: Dec. 13, 2020 | First doses of Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine arrive in Canada” – below is their description.

Today is the day the first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine are slated to arrive in Canada A pivotal point in this pandemic. The first batch of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, 30,000 doses, will be divided between 14 distribution sites across the country. Each jurisdiction has decided who will get the vaccine first, which includes frontline health-care workers and long-term care residents. Shots could be administered as early as Monday. It’s what everyone has been waiting for, but some provinces are still struggling to bring down the number of new infections.

Alberta recorded its deadliest day of the pandemic with 22 lives lost and more than 1,700 new infections reported in that province. Alberta has more than a quarter of Canada’s active cases despite having only 12 per cent of the country’s population. And that has forced the government to implement new restrictions. As Heather Yourex-West explains, hospitals can still expect an increasing number of patients and families can expect to see more loved ones die.

Ontario is set to begin its first round of COVID-19 vaccinations on Tuesday, but there are still not enough doses to go around to everyone. It will be months before the true scope of this national vaccination plan will be realized. That has health experts and politicians warning Canadians not to let their guard down. Morganne Campbell reports.

The first doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in the U.S. rolled out of a plant in Michigan this morning headed to healthcare workers across the country, but it could be months before they’re all vaccinated. The numbers in the U.S. are overwhelming with an average of 208,000 cases per day over the past week. As Jennifer Johnson reports, Operation Warp Speed can’t move fast enough.

Besides COVID-19, Alberta has the highest rate of syphilis in Canada. Now researchers at the University of Alberta are trying a strategy, it’s a two-for-one test that also looks for HIV. As Su-Ling Goh reports, the results only take five minutes so the patient can get treatment sooner.

Cape Breton, Nova Scotia is feeling cut off. There are no commercial flights going to or from the island. The region is home to a major university and 60 per cent of its student population comes from abroad. Tonight, there are concerns that number will take a nose dive to a lack of air transportation. Ross Lord reports.

Despite the introduction of COVID-19 rapid tests at some airports and the prospects of vaccines, air travel is still floundering. Airlines say they will lose $200 billion in 2020 and 2021. Business travel is a key component of the losses. Microsoft founder Bill Gates predicts corporate travel will never return to pre-pandemic levels. Redmond Shannon explains how that could make air travel more expensive for all of us.

Many businesses are getting hit hard in the pandemic, especially in what should be a lucrative holiday season. But the Christmas tree season is somehow booming across North America. It’s performing so well that it’s outperforming last year’s numbers. So what’s behind the growing demand?

Mike Drolet explains.

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In This Story: Canada

Canada is a country in the northern part of North America. It extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific and northward into the Arctic Ocean, covering 9.98 million square kilometres (3.85 million square miles), making it the world’s second-largest country by total area.

Its southern and western border with the United States, stretching 8,891 kilometres (5,525 mi), is the world’s longest bi-national land border. Canada’s capital is Ottawa, and its three largest metropolitan areas are Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver.

Various Indigenous peoples inhabited what is now Canada for thousands of years before European colonization. The Canada Act 1982, which severed the vestiges of legal dependence on the British Parliament. Canada is a parliamentary democracy and a constitutional monarchy in the Westminster tradition, with a monarch and a prime minister who serves as the chair of the Cabinet and head of government.

As a highly developed country, Canada has the seventeenth-highest nominal per-capita income globally as well as the thirteenth-highest ranking in the Human Development Index. Its advanced economy is the tenth-largest in the world, relying chiefly upon its abundant natural resources and well-developed international trade networks.

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The human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV) are two species of Lentivirus (a subgroup of retrovirus) that infect humans. Over time, they cause acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), a condition in which progressive failure of the immune system allows life-threatening opportunistic infections and cancers to thrive.

Without treatment, average survival time after infection with HIV is estimated to be 9 to 11 years, depending on the HIV subtype. In most cases, HIV is a sexually transmitted infection and occurs by contact with or transfer of blood, pre-ejaculate, semen, and vaginal fluids. Research has shown (for both same-sex and opposite-sex couples) that HIV is untransmittable through condomless sexual intercourse if the HIV-positive partner has a consistently undetectable viral load.

Non-sexual transmission can occur from an infected mother to her infant during pregnancy, during childbirth by exposure to her blood or vaginal fluid, and through breast milk. Within these bodily fluids, HIV is present as both free virus particles and virus within infected immune cells.

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