![Man says it's 'unbelievable' he and 14 others got expired COVID vaccines at Sask. pharmacy](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6668583.1669763627!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/jignesh-padia-and-wife.jpg)
Man says it's 'unbelievable' he and 14 others got expired COVID vaccines at Sask. pharmacy
CBC
A Regina man is angry after learning he, his wife and about a dozen others were recently injected with expired COVID-19 vaccines.
"We were trying to do the right thing. We're protecting my family and others by getting this vaccination. And to hear that you got something expired, it was unbelievable," Jignesh Padia told CBC News.
On Nov. 19, Padia and his wife went to the Southland Mall Safeway pharmacy to get a bivalent COVID shot, while their son got a flu shot.
He recalled that he sensed something was off.
"We did notice that the pharmacist appeared a little bit tired," Padia said.
He said that's why he double checked with the pharmacist that he and his wife were getting bivalent shots and made his son get the flu shot first "to avoid any mismanagement."
Then this past Friday, Padia got a call from the pharmacy informing him that the shots he and his wife received had expired on Nov. 2.
He was also told that they got doses that only protect against the original coronavirus, and not the bivalent vaccine that protects against Omicron subvariants.
"My son even said, 'how can this happen? When there is expired food, they throw it out,'" Padia said.
Padia and his wife weren't the only ones who got expired COVID vaccines. Sobeys, which owns Safeway pharmacies, says it has notified 15 people that they were given expired doses.
The company also said all the doses were the monovalent COVID-19 booster, not the bivalent one.
Pharmacies are supposed to throw out expired vaccines, according to the Saskatchewan Ministry of Health.
Sobeys said it's conducting an internal investigation to learn what led to the incident and how it can be prevented in the future.
"We sincerely regret that this has taken place and have apologized to our patients for the situation and inconvenience. This is contrary to the clearly outlined vaccine administration, storage and safety procedures we have in place at our pharmacies," wrote Sarah Dawson, public affairs lead for Sobeys.