Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world March 14 - Action News
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Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world March 14

Canada has now administered more than three million COVID-19 vaccine doses as of Sunday, according to a CBC News tally.

Canada has now administered more than 3 million COVID-19 vaccine doses

Pharmacist Abraam Rafael administers a COVID-19 vaccine to Maureen Doyle at his pharmacy in Toronto on Sunday. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

The latest:

Canada has now administered more than three million COVID-19 vaccine doses as of Sunday, according to a CBC News tally.

The milestone comes as provinces across the country expand access to vaccines.

New Brunswick residents85 and older are now eligible to book appointments with pharmacies to get vaccinated as of Sunday.

Quebec, which is already vaccinating people ages 70 and up across the province or 65 and up in Montreal, will expand its booking system as of Monday to add some 350 pharmacies to the list of places where people can get shots.

People are shown at a COVID-19 vaccination site in Montreal on Sunday. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Manitobasays eligibility nowincludes more age groups and health-care workers.

In Ontario, the province's vaccine booking system and support desk are set to go live on Monday. People who are aged 80 and older will be eligible to book appointments.

Saskatchewanannouncedthat anyone who is 70 or older can book an appointment for a COVID-19 vaccine as of Monday.

In Alberta, the province saysthey're nearing the maximum number of bookings it can handle for its current supply of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine. The province was initially given 58,500 doses of the vaccine.

And in B.C.,people84 years of age or older can begin booking COVID-19 vaccinations on Monday. In a release, the province said it isa week ahead of its vaccine booking schedule. As the week progresses, people in the 80-to-84 age range can call for bookings.


What's happening across Canada

As of 6 p.m.ET on Sunday,Canada had reported909,162cases of COVID-19, with 31,672 cases considered active. A CBC News tally of deaths stood at 22,463.

In British Columbia, the superintendent of Surrey'sschool district the one hit hardest by thepandemic in the province says it is pursuing targeted measures for more vulnerable schools.

Jordan Tinneysays new measures includeprohibiting parents from entering schools without the principal's permission, moving pre-kindergarten StrongStart programs online, asking students to leave the premises right after school and increasing monitoring of staff rooms.

AlbertaChief Medical Officer of HealthDr. Deena Hinshawannounced the province has identified its first cases of a coronavirus variant first detected in Brazil.Hinshawsays cases are travel-related, that the individuals involvedare isolating and that contact tracing is being conducted.

Saskatchewan saw98 new cases of COVID-19 and twomore deaths on Sunday.

Manitoba announced 44 new cases and an additional death.

Ontario registered 1,747 newcases the most since Feb. 7 and15 moredeaths. However,Health Minister Christine Elliottsaid today's number was inflated due to a data error in the provincial system.

Quebec confirmed 674 new casesfive more deaths.

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New Brunswick reported five new cases.

Nova Scotia added one new infection.

Newfoundland and Labrador has nonew cases for the second consecutive day, closing out a quiet weekend that saw the province settleinto lower alert levels and eased restrictions.

What's happening around the world

As of Sunday,more than 119.5million people around the world had been reported tohaving COVID-19, according to a tracking tool maintained by the U.S.-based Johns Hopkins University. Of those, more than 67.7million were listed as recovered. The global death toll stood at more than 2.6 million.

In Europe, officials say the Paris region may be headed toward a new lockdown as new variants of the virus fill up intensive care units and limited vaccine supplies drag down inoculation efforts in the French capital.

A COVID-19 patient is loaded into a plane heading to a western France hospital, at Orly airport, south of Paris, on Sunday. (Jaques Witt/Pool via AP)

In Africa, the United Nations says more than 14 million vaccine doses have been delivered to the continent in the past three weeks through COVAX,a UN-backed initiative aimed at ensuring equal access to vaccines.

In Asia, Pakistani health and administrative authorities have imposed a partial lockdown in the country's largest province, Punjab, and the northern part of the country amid a third wave.

In the Americas, more than 25 per cent of Chileans has now received at least one shot a COVID-19 vaccine, placing the country of 19 million among the top nations in the world at vaccinating its population.

With files from The Associated Press and The Canadian Press

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