Senin, 18 Januari 2021

Covid-19: Four million in UK get their first vaccine - BBC News

More than four million people in the UK have received their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine, according to government figures.

People in their 70s and the clinically extremely vulnerable in England are now among those being offered the vaccine.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the latest UK-wide figures showed more in hospital with Covid than ever and urged people to follow lockdown rules.

He said: "Do not blow it now. We are on the route out. We have to stick at it."

Speaking during a Downing Street briefing, Mr Hancock said more than half of those over 80 and half of elderly care home residents have been vaccinated.

He said that in some parts of the country the "vast majority" of people in their 80s have had their first dose - and specifically congratulated Slough for having already vaccinated every single elderly care home resident.

Earlier, Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey had said people in her constituency in the Suffolk Coastal area had told her some over-80s, and even over-90s, have not been invited for a vaccination while younger people have been.

When Mr Hancock was asked why some areas of the UK were reporting not having enough vaccines, he said "supply is the rate-limiting factor".

He said the government was now "prioritising the supply" to places that needed to vaccinate over-80s - but did not want to stop areas that had progressed well from pressing on with vaccinating their other priority groups.

A further 599 people have died within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test, according to the latest government figures. - and another 37,535 positive cases were reported - but figures are often lower on a Monday because of lags in reporting data over the weekend.

It comes as 10 further mass vaccination hubs opened across England., adding to 10 already in place.

Speaking during a visit to a vaccination centre in Oxford, Boris Johnson said it was "right" to offer the jab to other priority groups from this week.

"I think actually the whole of the UK is going very well. And, overall, the pace of the rollout is very encouraging," he said.

He warned there would be no "Open Sesame" relaxation of Covid restrictions, adding that any easing was reliant on the vaccine rollout being a success and there being no further concerning variants of the virus.

The number of people who have received their first dose of the vaccine is now 4,062,501 - more than have tested positive (3,433,494) since the pandemic began.

The expansion of the vaccination programme means it now includes priority groups three and four - people in their 70s and clinically extremely vulnerable individuals.

However, people in the top two groups - care home residents, those aged 80 and over, and front-line healthcare workers - should still be prioritised for vaccinations, the Department for Health and Social Care said.

Nadhim Zahawi, the minister responsible for the vaccine rollout, defended the decision to offer Covid jabs to the over-70s and clinically vulnerable - before all those in the first two priority groups have had their vaccinations.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the over-80s "need not worry" if they had not yet been invited for a jab.

He said as it was only areas where the majority of the over-80s had been vaccinated that people aged 70 and over were being invited for jabs. He added that, by today, 50% of care home residents should have been vaccinated.

Although vaccine supply remained "lumpy", he said he was "confident" the government would meet its target to vaccinate all 15 million people in the top four priority groups by 15 February.

Prof Stephen Powis, National Medical Director at NHS England
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Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director for NHS England, said there was more pressure on the NHS than ever before.

Speaking alongside Mr Hancock in the briefing, he said around 15,000 people had been admitted to hospital since Christmas Eve, adding: "That is well over 20 hospitals worth of patients."

He said it would be "some time" before the vaccination programme begins to reduce pressures on hospitals.

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The new mass vaccination centres are in:

  • Bournemouth International Centre, Dorset
  • Taunton Racecourse, Somerset
  • Blackburn Cathedral, Lancashire
  • Salt Hill Activity Centre, Berkshire
  • Norwich Food Court, Norfolk
  • The Lodge in Wickford, Essex
  • Princess Royal Sports Arena, Boston, Lincolnshire
  • St Helens Rugby Ground, Merseyside
  • The park-and-ride at Askham Bar, York
  • Olympic Office Centre in Wembley, north London

The seven hubs already in use are in: Etihad Tennis Centre, Manchester; Epsom Downs Racecourse, Surrey; Robertson House, Stevenage; Centre for Life, Newcastle; Ashton Gate Stadium, Bristol; Millennium Point, Birmingham; ExCel, London.

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Dr Rupert Pearse, a consultant in Intensive Care Medicine at a London Hospital, said although it appeared that infection levels had peaked in the capital, cases were still rising elsewhere in England, including the North West and Yorkshire, adding there was "still cause to be concerned".

He told BBC Radio 4's World At One that hospital admissions tended to "lag seven to 10 days behind the peak in infections", with intensive care admissions coming 48 hours after that.

He said that hospitals that are very close to the maximum number of beds they can give to Covid patients were "still very worried about what will happen in the coming days".

Dr Sarah Burford, a GP in Wellington, Somerset, who has been helping lead vaccine rollout in her region, said it was going "terribly well" but that "a few" patients had turned up out of the blue looking for a jab.

She told BBC Radio 4's World At One programme that her four vaccinators were each giving a jab every seven-and-a-half minutes.

Dr Burford added the over-80s and frontline healthcare workers were being invited for jabs, and her team's "priority" for this week and next would be vaccinating care home residents and staff.

She said although most people were being patient, fielding calls or walk-in inquiries about when people could expect to be vaccinated was only delaying staff from administering jabs.

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Meanwhile, Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford has defended the speed of the vaccine rollout in Wales, insisting the nation was "on track" to vaccinate all top four priority groups by mid-February.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Wales's supply of the Pfizer jab is not being used all at once as it has to last until a delivery in February.

In Wales, 151,737 people have received a first dose of a Covid vaccine, according to Public Health Wales, and in Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced that 264,991 people have had a first dose of the jab, with 80% of care home residents having now been vaccinated.

While the prime minster said the UK is making "huge progress in our fight against the virus", he also expressed concern about that progress being derailed by new - currently unknown - variants of the virus.

As such, he announced on Friday that, from this week, all travel corridors are to be closed.

That means that anyone arriving in the UK - with only a small number of exceptions - will have to quarantine. Under current rules, anyone flying into the country from overseas also has to show proof of a negative Covid test before setting off.

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Are you due to have a coronavirus vaccine? You can get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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2021-01-18 17:44:00Z
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