Ontario becomes first province to prioritize pregnancy in vaccination rollout
After months of shifting advice, Ontario has become the first Canadian province to prioritize pregnant women in a vaccine rollout plan, without special conditions. Health-care workers and specialists say the move is a win for pregnant women and for public health.
“I really think it’s a great thing that they’ve taken this huge change in stance,” said Dr. Courtney Westerlaken, a family doctor in Ottawa who is pregnant and was initially denied a vaccine because of her pregnancy.
Ontario’s Health Minister Christine Elliott said her team has been learning a lot about the vaccines in a very short time. “Though it’s not as strict as it was, they’re still recommending that women who are pregnant … should speak with their primary care physician or nurse practitioner before receiving the vaccine,” she told reporters Monday.
Health authorities listed pregnancy as a factor putting someone at risk for hospitalization or death from COVID-19 as they released details of the province’s vaccination plan Friday. That means pregnant women are now eligible for a vaccine during the second phase of the province’s rollout.

