Special syringes shouldn’t overshadow other vaccination tools, pharmacy prof says
TORONTO — Special syringes that help generate extra doses of COVID-19 vaccines may be in demand right now, but one expert says the country shouldn’t treat it as the only solution to getting Canadians inoculated as quickly as possible.
So-called low dead space syringes, which limit vaccine getting trapped in the needle, have become popular in recent weeks as many countries try to capture six doses from each Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine vial instead of the standard five.
But Kelly Grindrod, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo’s pharmacy school, said one-millilitre syringes and alternate vaccines are just as important to the country’s inoculation efforts.
“What we’re seeing now is that (vaccination) is really messy business and having more options in the long run actually will be a lot better for us than hanging our hat on one,” she said.