In Canada, U.S., vaccine 'passports' could be new point of cross-border contention
Requiring proof of vaccination against COVID-19 could be the next point of contention between Canada and the United States.
Requiring proof of vaccination against COVID-19 could be the next point of contention between Canada and the United States.
The Ste-Justine Hospital in Montreal confirmed Wednesday that a 16-year-old has died of COVID-19.
British Columbia reported another 997 cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday as the number of patients battling the disease in intensive care units reached a new record high.
The National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) is standing by its recommendation to delay second doses of two-shot COVID-19 vaccines by up to four months, but is now acknowledging that given Canada's increasing vaccine supply, not everyone will be waiting four months between their doses.
A fence has been erected around an Alberta church after its congregation has met for months in violation of provincial COVID-19 orders.
Ontario has declared its third state of emergency since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and will be implementing a provincewide stay-at-home order as of Thursday.
The parade of Minneapolis police officers rejecting former officer Derek Chauvin's actions in restraining George Floyd continued at his murder trial, including a use-of-force instructor who said officers were coached to "stay away from the neck when possible."
Thousands of vaccine appointments have gone unclaimed in some parts of Canada recently, and experts say government messaging may be to blame.
Some real estate experts and would-be homebuyers are calling for an end to 'blind bidding' as a way of cooling what they say is an unsustainable housing market.
One in three COVID-19 survivors in a study of more than 230,000 mostly American patients were diagnosed with a brain or psychiatric disorder within six months, according to a new study.
Health Canada says it is launching a probe into Pfizer Inc's arthritis drug, Xeljanz, after a trial by the company identified increased risk of serious heart-related issues and cancer in the participants.
Secondary three, four and five students in Montreal and Quebec's other red zones will be going back to attending class on alternate days.