COVID-19 on P.E.I.: What's happening Sunday, April 11

Anyone 55 and older can start receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine Monday at select pharmacies on P.E.I.  (Laura Hasani/Reuters - image credit)
Anyone 55 and older can start receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine Monday at select pharmacies on P.E.I. (Laura Hasani/Reuters - image credit)

Some golf courses on P.E.I. are enjoying their earliest spring opening yet.

More Prince Edward Islanders have begun foraging for their own food, and experts say a snack can be as close as your own backyard.

Even as the Atlantic bubble is scheduled to bring down barriers in the Atlantic provinces in a little more than a week, many P.E.I. tourism operators are still trying to decide whether to open this season.

Coffee shops in Charlottetown are delicately discouraging "computer campers" from taking up tables for hours at a time when space is at a premium.

Now with the bubble scheduled to reopen April 19, two brothers from P.E.I. now living in New Brunswick are reviving a P.E.I.-themed beer in hopes of luring Islanders to the mainland.

Work is progressing on the interior of the new rink in Tyne Valley, P.E.I., and the community hopes to have it open in time for the annual oyster festival this summer.

The Prince County Hospital in Summerside, P.E.I., has begun a pilot project with a goal for late fall of recruiting three intensive care nurses with at least five years of experience.

Starting April 12, Islanders aged 55 can begin receiving the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine at 12 Island pharmacies.

Prince Edward Island recorded its 162nd case of COVID-19 Friday, with news of a case linked to travel outside the Atlantic region.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic region:

Also in the news

These Islanders are currently eligible for a vaccine

  • People over 60.

  • People over the age of 55 may book for an AstraZeneca vaccine at a pharmacy.

  • People providing health care services to the public — including optometrists, pharmacists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists — and their support staff.

  • Firefighters, police officers, power-line workers.

  • Residents and staff of long-term care homes.

  • Adults living in Indigenous communities.

  • Residents and staff of shared living facilities.

  • Truck drivers and other rotational workers.

Further resources

Reminder about symptoms

The symptoms of COVID-19 can include:

  • Fever.

  • Cough or worsening of a previous cough.

  • Possible loss of taste and/or smell.

  • Sore throat.

  • New or worsening fatigue.

  • Headache.

  • Shortness of breath.

  • Runny nose.

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