Kamis, 07 Januari 2021

GP surgery used by Matt Hancock to promote vaccine HASN'T GOT ANY - Daily Mail

Embarrassment for Health Secretary Matt Hancock as London GP surgery he visits to promote the launch of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine roll-out reveals it HASN'T GOT ANY

  • Minister visited the Bloomsbury Surgery in central London this morning
  • Said Oxford/ AstraZeneca vaccine being supplied to GPs across the country
  • But surgery partner said its first delivery had been pushed back to tomorrow

Matt Hancock faced embarrassment today when a GP surgery he visited to mark the start of a new coronavirus vaccine roll-out revealed it had not yet received any.

Mr Hancock said the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine was now being supplied to GP practices across the country as he visited the Bloomsbury Surgery in central London.

But GP Ammara Hughes, a partner at the surgery, told Sky News that its first delivery of AstraZeneca's vaccine had been pushed back 24 hours to Thursday. 

The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is easier to distribute than the temperature-sensitive Pfizer/BioNTech jab which was the first to be approved.

But the Health Secretary said the 'rate limiting' factor in efforts to get people vaccinated was supply from the manufacturers.

GPs in England are starting the mass rollout of the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine as hospitals across the UK face rising numbers of seriously ill patients.

The jabs are being delivered to sites across the country as the Government commits to offering a vaccine to more than 13 million people in the top four priority groups by mid-February.

Dr Hughes said: 'It's just more frustrating than a concern because we've got the capacity to vaccinate. And if we had a regular supply - we do have the capacity to vaccinate three to four thousand patients a week.

Mr Hancock said the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine was now being supplied to GP practices across the country as he visited the Bloomsbury Surgery in central London

Mr Hancock said the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine was now being supplied to GP practices across the country as he visited the Bloomsbury Surgery in central London

But GP Ammara Hughes, a partner at the surgery, told Sky News that its first delivery of AstraZeneca's vaccine had been pushed back 24 hours to Thursday.

But GP Ammara Hughes, a partner at the surgery, told Sky News that its first delivery of AstraZeneca's vaccine had been pushed back 24 hours to Thursday.

The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine (pictured) is easier to distribute than the temperature-sensitive Pfizer /BioNTech jab which was the first to be approved

The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine (pictured) is easier to distribute than the temperature-sensitive Pfizer /BioNTech jab which was the first to be approved

'We have been running since the middle of December and on our busiest days we can vaccinate 500 people easily.

'If we could get the AstraZeneca, then we could easily vaccinate 500 a day, which would ease the pressure on the health service and we could get more and more people vaccinated quickly and hopefully get out of the pandemic.'

Standing in front of Dr Hughes's surgery, the Health Secretary said: 'It's great news this morning that the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is from right now being rolled out to GP surgeries across the country.

'For the first three days with the Oxford vaccine we did it in hospitals to check that it was working well and it's working well so now we can make sure that it gets to all those GP surgeries that like this one can do all the vaccinations that are needed.

'The rate-limiting step is the supply of vaccine. We're working with the companies - both Pfizer and AstraZeneca - to increase the supply.'

The rapid expansion of the vaccination programme is key to the Government's efforts to tackle coronavirus and lift England's national lockdown.

It comes as NHS trusts in London are on the verge of being overwhelmed, according to leaked health service documents, while other trusts are rapidly turning normal wards into intensive care units (ICUs).

As of January 4, there were 30,451 people in UK hospitals with coronavirus, much higher than the April 12 peak of 21,684.

Rupert Pearse, professor of intensive care medicine and a consultant at the Royal London, said his own ICU staff are having to care for far more sick patients as he urged the public to heed the 'stay at home' lockdown message.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme there would usually be one fully-trained ICU nurse to one ICU patient but staff are becoming increasingly stretched.

'Right now we are diluting down to one (ICU) nurse to three (patients) and filling those gaps with untrained staff and in some instances doctors helping nurses deliver their care ... and we're even facing diluting that further to one in four,' he said.

'As intensive care doctors, we're not sure how we can together deliver the quality of care that we need to.'

Speaking on behalf of the Intensive Care Society, he said the problems are not just in London, but in other hospitals across the UK, and are not limited to ICU wards.

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2021-01-07 12:58:00Z
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COVID-19: Surgery visited by Matt Hancock to mark Oxford/AstraZeneca jab rollout has delivery of it delayed - Sky News

The GP surgery visited by the health secretary to mark the expanded rollout of the Oxford/AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine has not yet received any of it.

Matt Hancock was at Bloomsbury Surgery in Camden, north London on Thursday, as the government's plans to offer a COVID-19 jab to the most vulnerable by the middle of next month stepped up a gear.

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Ammara GP
Image: Dr Ammara Hughes says she informed the health secretary of the delayed delivery

But GP Ammara Hughes said the first delivery of the jab to the surgery has been delayed by 24 hours.

She said: "We were expecting our first AstraZeneca 400 today, but we've had a pushback for 24 hours so we're now getting that delivery tomorrow."

Dr Hughes added: "It's just more frustrating than a concern, because we've got the capacity to vaccinate and if we had a regular supply, we do have the capacity to vaccinate three to four thousand patients a week.

"We have been running since the middle of December, and on our busiest days we can vaccinate 500 people easily.

More from Covid-19

"If we could get the AstraZeneca, then we could easily vaccinate 500 a day, which would ease the pressure on the health service and we could get more and more people vaccinated quickly and hopefully get out of the pandemic."

Asked if she had raised the issue with the health secretary, Dr Hughes said she had.

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Will the vaccines work against variants?

"The health secretary was quite surprised actually to learn that we don't know when all of our deliveries are coming, they're very ad hoc," she continued.

"He has said he'll take that back and look into it and see if we can be ensured regular deliveries."

Dr Hughes said the surgery had been administering the Pfizer vaccine since the middle of December and had so far received three deliveries of that jab.

"So we've continued to vaccinate with Pfizer in the surgery, and what we're hoping to do with the AstraZeneca when it arrives is to go out to the most clinically vulnerable and housebound. So that's what we'll be doing," she explained.

"We won't start vaccinating within the surgery with our AstraZeneca doses until we've finished our Pfizer vaccines."

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Anti-terror training cut from vaccinator training

But she said there had been some issues with the timing of deliveries that meant the surgery had been unable to book second vaccine doses for patients.

"It seems like there's obviously been a supply problem or an issue in terms of getting those deliveries out to us," Dr Hughes said.

"What I said to the health secretary today was, we are willing, we are able, you get us the vaccines, we will deliver.

"That's the simple message from all of my primary colleagues who have gone out and set up vaccination sites across the country."

Sky News has contacted the Department of Health for a response to Dr Hughes's comments.

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Nadhim Zahawi, vaccine minister, is pressed on the achievability of govt's target to vaccinate 14 million people by mid-February.

Speaking outside the surgery earlier, Mr Hancock said it was "great news" that the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine was being rolled out to GP surgeries.

He added: "For the first three days with the Oxford vaccine we did it in hospitals, to check that it was working well and it's working well, so now we can make sure that it gets to all those GP surgeries that can do all the vaccinations that are needed.

"The rate limiting step is the supply of vaccine and we're working with the companies, both Pfizer and of course AstraZeneca, to increase the supply.

"I want to thank all the GP surgeries who have been working hard to get the vaccine out so far and are now going to have more vaccine coming through so that they can get all of those vulnerable groups vaccinated."

The UK has set a target of offering a jab to everyone in the top four priority groups - just under 14 million people - by the middle of February.

When he announced England's third national lockdown earlier this week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said protecting those most vulnerable to the virus would allow the government to begin considering easing restrictions.

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2021-01-07 11:16:15Z
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Covid-19: Vaccination widens as Oxford jab sent to GPs - BBC News

Copyright: EPA

Hospital bosses say they are seeking space in care homes and nursing homes as the healthcare system reaches capacity.

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers which represents hospital trusts, tells BBC Radio 4's Today programme: “This is escalating really quickly.

"We’ve seen 5,000 new patients in hospital beds with Covid-19 over the past week – that’s 10 full hospitals’ worth of Covid patients in hospitals in just seven days, so it’s a really big challenge."

He says in some places hospital beds are full, community beds are full and community at home services are also full, meaning hospitals are in talks with nursing homes and care homes for extra capacity.

“It’s literally leaving no stone unturned to maximise every single piece of capacity we’ve got in those areas under real pressure.”

The Exeter and Manchester Nightingale hospitals are currently being used, he says, but they are a "last resort" as they divert staff and are not purpose-built for health and care.

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2021-01-07 07:51:54Z
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Rabu, 06 Januari 2021

Think Britain has vaccine problems? You should see the EU, writes ALEXANDER VON SCHOENBURG - Daily Mail

Think Britain has vaccine problems? You should see the mess we've made of it here in the EU, writes ALEXANDER VON SCHOENBURG, editor-at-large of Germany's biggest-selling newspaper Bild

Alexander von Schoenburg, Editor at Large at Bild newspaper in Germany

Alexander von Schoenburg, Editor at Large at Bild newspaper in Germany

Britons may understandably be feeling more than a little frustrated with their leaders right now during this new and more vicious phase of the pandemic.

Covid infections are soaring in the UK, there are more patients hospitalised than at the peak of the first wave and, tragically, daily deaths yesterday topped the 1,000 mark.

Then there is fury over your school closures, a developing row over who should get the vaccine — young or old — and problems with supply and distribution.

Yes, you may feel things look grim, but let me tell you that many of us here in Europe are looking across the Channel with envy.

The sclerotic and sluggish EU machine has, unforgivably, botched the roll-out of the vaccines, and the consequences are likely to prove fatal to many thousands of our citizens.

The pandemic is almost a year old and EU leaders could have and should have seen the need for a swift, effective vaccine policy a mile off. 

Instead, delays, in-fighting, national self-interest and sheer bungling bureaucracy have combined to cripple the EU’s vaccine efforts.

Now a growing fury is spreading as we watch independent countries — particularly Britain, Israel and America — ramping up their vaccine distribution with tremendous efficiency in comparison to our efforts, saving lives, protecting the vulnerable and moving towards ending this terrible crisis.

Brian Pinker, one of the first to get the Oxford vaccine who describes himself as Oxford born and bred, said he was 'so pleased' to be getting it and was 'proud' it was developed in his city

Brian Pinker, one of the first to get the Oxford vaccine who describes himself as Oxford born and bred, said he was 'so pleased' to be getting it and was 'proud' it was developed in his city

Don’t believe me? Let me take you through the numbers.

More than 1.3 million people in Britain have now received either the Pfizer/BioNTech jab or the more recently approved Oxford/AstraZeneca version.

As of yesterday, France, your closest neighbour, had vaccinated just 7,000 people. During the first week of its vaccination programme, France immunised a pitiful 516 individuals: Britain managed 130,000 in the first seven days and started doing so weeks earlier.

From his bunker in the Elysee Palace, the beleaguered President Macron admits that this paltry figure is ‘not worthy of the French people,’ adding, with Gallic understatement, ‘things aren’t going well’. You can say that again.

But France’s record is in fact just one of a shameful litany across the continent. In Holland, the first Covid-19 vaccines were administered only yesterday — almost a full month after Margaret Keenan, now 91, became the first British patient to receive the jab on the NHS.

In the Polish capital Warsaw, one hospital has attracted widespread criticism for reportedly opting to give the vaccine to celebrities and politicians before vulnerable older citizens, sparking a government investigation there.

88-year-old Trevor Cowlett receives the Oxford University/AstraZeneca Covid vaccine from nurse Sam Foster at the Churchill Hospital in Oxford as the NHS ramps up its vaccination programme

88-year-old Trevor Cowlett receives the Oxford University/AstraZeneca Covid vaccine from nurse Sam Foster at the Churchill Hospital in Oxford as the NHS ramps up its vaccination programme

My home country of Germany had, by Tuesday, vaccinated some 317,000 people — by far the most of the EU27.

Yet what a bitter irony it is that we who were crucial to the development and manufacturing of the Pfizer/BioNTech jab — BioNTech is a start-up based outside Frankfurt — must now watch lorry loads of supplies travelling to Britain while our own roll-out is beset by delay, uncertainty and fears about future supply.

Our health minister has warned that Germany will not be vaccinating at Britain’s rate until at least the summer, thanks to distribution problems and the EU’s ill-considered ‘cap’ on the number of doses that can be distributed to the various member states.

So why, despite frequent warnings throughout last year from both the private sector and individual health ministries, and despite the limitless resources at its disposal, have things gone so horribly wrong for the EU?

The seeds were sown as far back as March when the pandemic began to engulf the continent.

I was in northern Italy at the time, reporting for my paper Bild on what was the first region in Europe to be hit hard by coronavirus. I saw for myself the military lorries in Bergamo transporting coffins to mass graves, and I will not soon forget it.

Alarmed at the horror that was unfolding, Germany’s health minister Jens Spahn ordered German manufacturers of PPE and other clinical equipment to stop selling abroad.

Understandably, Italy was shocked by the export ban and a chorus of EU commentators demanded ‘solidarity’.

Scarred by that experience, and ever desperate to portray herself as a pan-European, Chancellor Angela Merkel — who never wastes an opportunity to surrender her own country’s interests to those of the EU — handed over Germany’s vaccination policy to the European Commission.

It’s now all too clear that many Germans will die needlessly because of that decision and the desperately slow roll-out that has followed. 

Boris Johnson watches as Jennifer Dumasi is injected with the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine during a visit to Chase Farm Hospital in north London on Monday morning

Boris Johnson watches as Jennifer Dumasi is injected with the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine during a visit to Chase Farm Hospital in north London on Monday morning

The Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, is known for her bossy, power-grabbing tendencies.

These may have served her well in the closing weeks of the Brexit negotiations last month, but they have helped to plunge Europe into its vaccination crisis.

Over the summer, under Mrs von der Leyen and the Commission’s health chief, the Cypriot Stella Kyriakides, the EU made a series of devastating strategic errors. It ordered 300 million doses of a vaccine manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline-Sanofi, a drug that then stumbled in trials.

It spent the summer haggling over the price for the Pfizer/BioNTech jab, ordering sizeable shipments only in November.

Britain, meanwhile, ordered 40 million doses of the same vaccine in July; America put in for 600 million.

Disgracefully, the EU has still not approved the ‘game-changing’ Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine — which is both cheap and can be stored in a standard refrigerator — that Britain began rolling out this week after securing 100 million doses.

(I should acknowledge that yesterday the EU did approve another vaccine, manufactured by Moderna, on which Britain has yet to sign off.)

Though the EU has now signed contracts to buy six different vaccines, its regulators have approved just two.

This terrible stasis will prove fatal — in every sense — for the EU’s population: time is running out for its healthcare systems as new and more infectious variants of the virus take hold.

Amid this chaos, it’s perhaps no surprise that some European lawmakers are desperately trying to shift the blame. 

Disgracefully, Belgium’s deputy prime minister, Petra De Sutter, accused other countries of using sub-standard vaccines.

‘The UK and Israel, as well as Russia and China, are vaccinating people with vaccines that are not of the same standard as the ones we use,’ she said this week.

Yes, the U.S. and the UK gained a head start by invoking emergency powers that mean drug manufacturers are less exposed should problems with a vaccine later surface.

But that is the kind of rapid, vital and timely decision a sovereign country can make in a crisis.

It is impossible to make the same decision when you have 27 countries arguing with one another, all overseen by a remote and unaccountable bureaucracy in Brussels.

So what conclusions can we draw? First, nation states are far more effective in a crisis than unwieldy groupings of different countries.

But the most bitter irony for Europe is that the one foreign politician our liberal commentariat have most mocked for years — Boris Johnson — is also the one who acted swiftly and decisively when it came to securing the vaccines. The number of doses you have speaks for itself.

And it was the ‘sensible’ federalist Europeans who have failed so miserably.

Anyone who still doubts the wisdom of Brexit needs only to look at the vaccine chaos unfolding across the Channel — and think again.

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2021-01-07 01:23:00Z
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London's hospitals will be overwhelmed by Covid patients in TWO weeks, stark NHS briefing warns - Daily Mail

London's hospitals will be overwhelmed by Covid patients in TWO weeks in a BEST CASE scenario with 2,000 beds needed even after Nightingale is opened, stark NHS briefing warns

  • Medical director at NHS London Vin Diwakar provided the worrying analysis to medical directors in London
  • Even if Covid patients grew at the lowest likely rate and capacity is increased NHS would still be short 2,000
  • Three scenarios are laid out for both general and acute and intensive care beds - 'best', 'average' and 'worse'
  • These account for the impact of four per cent daily growth, five per cent growth and six per cent growth
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London's hospitals will be overwhelmed by Covid-19 in less than two weeks even in a 'best' case scenario, an official briefing reportedly warns.

Medical director at NHS London Vin Diwakar provided the worrying analysis to medical directors of the capital's hospital trusts over a Zoom call this afternoon.

Even if coronavirus patients grew at the lowest likely rate and capacity is increased - including opening the Nightingale - the NHS would still be short 2,000 general, acute and ICU beds by January 19, the HSJ reports.

Three scenarios are laid out for both G&A and intensive care - 'best', 'average' and 'worse'. These account for the impact of four per cent daily growth, five per cent growth and six per cent growth respectively.

Growth for G&A beds on January 5 was 3.5 per cent, with the rate at 4.8 per cent for ICU beds, the report claimed.

It comes after Britain breached 1,000 daily coronavirus deaths for the first time since April and declared another record-high number of cases with 62,322 more positive tests.

Department of Health data shows the grim figure of 1,041 laboratory-confirmed deaths — only the 10th time the UK has topped the milestone — is UK's highest daily count since April 21.

And experts fear the death toll will continue to spiral as the soaring cases over the past three weeks translates to more deaths as people get sicker.

Statistics show it is the third day in a row Britain has posted a record number of cases, following from the 60,916 yesterday and the 58,784 the day before. It is also 24.6 per cent up on last Wednesday's count of 50,023.

In another day of coronavirus chaos:

  • Britain's COVID crackdown began as pictures showed masked cops handcuffing pensioners and protesters 'breaking lockdown rules', with police officers stopping cars to quiz drivers;
  • Former prime minister Tony Blair said the UK needs to dramatically accelerate its Covid vaccination scheme in order to lift lockdown rules in the spring, saying it was 'not complicated' to ramp-up the programme;
  • Matt Hancock said teachers have a 'very strong case' to be next in line to receive the coronavirus vaccine, as the Health Secretary told MPs ministers are currently considering the rest of the priority order;  
  • A GP on the frontline of Britain's coronavirus vaccine push revealed doctors have still not received doses that were supposed to arrive last month, amid fears Boris Johnson has over-promised with his pledge;
  • Europe's drug regulator approved Moderna's Covid vaccine and will get supplies from next week thanks to a deal it struck in summer last year — but Britain will miss out and won't get any until the spring; 
  • The World Health Organization refused to give its blessing to Britain's controversial plan to space the two doses of Pfizer's coronavirus vaccine by more than a month;
  • Boris Johnson was accused of leaving a 'substantial gap in the nation's defences' against coronavirus by delaying rules on people needing a negative test before entering the UK;
  • Gavin Williamson was under pressure to explain how teachers will be able to accurately grade GCSEs and A-levels for pupils after the 2021 exams were cancelled due to Covid;
  • Politicians and experts blasted China for refusing entry to members of a World Health Organization(WHO) team being sent to the country to investigate the origins of the coronavirus pandemic;
  • Doctors may have to decide which severely ill patients to treat based on a 'lottery' if the NHS is overwhelmed this winter under draft Covid rationing plans;
  • The organiser of Clap for Carers is calling for a return to the weekly round of applause during England's third national lockdown - starting from 8pm tomorrow.

Mr Diwakar found the 'best' case forecast would mean the number of Covid patients in G&A beds rising to 9,500 by January 19, with non-Covid patients remaining the same at 7,460 - a number which remains constant throughout all the scenarios.

After small demand control measures, the total demand is predicted to be at 17,100. 

Possible ways of increasing capacity includes the NHS securing an additional 400 beds, with the independent sector finding 50.

In addition to this, 1,000 'step down beds', some supplied by the Nightingale hospital's opening, and 150 made available by specialist trusts, would give a total capacity of 15,600 - still 1,500 short of the forecast demand.

The 'average' scenario would see a shortfall of 2,900 beds, with 4,400 in the 'worse' scenario.

The intensive care, or 'adult critical care', model uses the same pattern as the one used for G&A beds, with the 'best' scenario showing the number of Covid patients rising to 1,600 with 'total unmitigated demand' at just above 2,000.

Mitigated capacity is predicted to be at 1,660, with a 'deficit' of a little more than 400 beds in intensive care.

Downing Street is desperately trying to speed up its mass vaccination programme, which is considered the only way to escape the never-ending cycle of lockdowns.

The PM pledged to vaccinate the most at-risk 13million Britons by mid-February with the ambition of easing restrictions — but today he conceded there would not be a 'big bang' release from the current national lockdown.

He revealed seven mass coronavirus vaccination centres will open next week to turbo-charge efforts to get jabs to millions of people, with the make-shift sites operated by NHS staff and volunteers.

But politicians fear he may have over-promised with his pledge, with ministers already trying to shift the blame for disruptions to the initial supply of vaccines, with Boris Johnson first saying the hold-up was due to quality checks done by regulators and Matt Hancock trying to pin difficulties on limited manufacturing supply.

Pharmacists have called for their shops to be used to dish out the jabs and asked the NHS to use its 'invisible army' of volunteers to ensure up to 3million are vaccinated each week.

And Former prime minister Tony Blair published a 'blueprint' and urged No10 throw all its weight behind the vaccine programme, insisting scaling up the scheme 'is not complicated'.

Defending England's third national lockdown, the Prime Minister told a recalled House of Commons that his hand had been forced after a new variant of the disease was found to be spreading with 'frightening ease'.

Mr Johnson said No10's mass inoculation programme meant nearly one quarter of over-80s had already received jabs and England had vaccinated more people 'than in the rest of Europe combined'.

His national shutdown, which includes a strict stay at home message and the closure of schools, is due to be reviewed in the middle of February but the laws underpinning it are not due to expire until the end of March.

Mr Johnson has said he hopes the rules can start to be lifted in the spring but he has failed to give a firm commitment, fuelling Tory fears that the restrictions could be in place far longer than the initial seven weeks.

Mr Johnson stressed that when rules are eased there will be a 'gradual unwrapping' of lockdown rather than an immediate end as he dashed hopes of a swift return to normal life.

Senior Tories accused the Prime Minister of launching an 'assault on liberty and livelihoods' as they warned lockdown will inevitably cause some people to 'break'.

Mr Hancock ducked demands to give a firm end point for lockdown as he suggested that even if the vaccine rollout happens by mid-February, curbs might have to stay if deaths do not fall.

The Health Secretary came under fire from his own side as he kicked off the debate on the regulations underpinning the brutal squeeze - which has already come into effect.

Mr Johnson made clear that a successful roll-out of the vaccine programme will be key to determining when the lockdown measures can be lifted. 

He said: 'We have already vaccinated more people in this country than in the rest of Europe combined and we will give the House the maximum possible transparency about our acceleration of this effort, publishing daily updates online from Monday so that jab by jab honourable members can scrutinise the process being made every day. 

Above are the locations of the seven mass vaccination centres that will begin operating from next week. They were revealed today by the Prime Minister

Above are the locations of the seven mass vaccination centres that will begin operating from next week. They were revealed today by the Prime Minister

'Yet as we take this giant leap towards finally overcoming the virus and reclaiming our lives we have to contend with the new variant which is between 50 and 70 per cent more contagious. 

'The tiers the House agreed last month, was working with the old variant but alas, this mutation spreading with frightening ease and speed in spite of the sterling work of the British public, this mutation has led to more cases than we have seen ever before, numbers that alas cannot be explained away by the meteoric rise in testing.'

But fears are growing that the Prime Minister may have over-promised with his pledge to jab 13million Britons by mid-February. 

GP dishing out Covid jab says they have had NO doses despite being 'raring to go'

A GP on the frontline of Britain's great coronavirus vaccine push has revealed doctors have still not received doses that were supposed to arrive last month, amid fears Boris Johnson has over-promised with his pledge to jab 13million Brits and end lockdown by March.

Dr Rosemary Leonard, an NHS family doctor who works in South London, said her practices were 'raring to go' and had been waiting on their first batch of vaccinations since December 28.

But she claimed the delivery date has been pushed back three times already, with the first doses now not due to arrive until January 15, more than a fortnight late.

Dr Leonard, who also writes a column for the Daily Express newspaper, warned the vaccine roll out was becoming a 'postcode lottery for patients', and believes the delay is the result of 'central supply issues'.

Despite being just days into the rollout of the Oxford vaccine, there has already been finger-pointing between the Government, regulators and the jab's manufacturer AstraZeneca over who is to blame for the delays.

Matt Hancock and NHS bosses have suggested manufacturing has been too slow, while the Prime Minister has blamed the UK's stringent batch testing rules which mean every deliver of vaccine needs to be quality checked.

It comes as independent pharmacists begged the Government to let small chains dish out vaccinations to help Number 10 fulfill its ambitious vaccine promises, which will require jabbing a mammoth 3million Brits a week.

MailOnline has spoken to at least half a dozen membership bodies which claim there are 11,000 pharmacies 'ready, willing and able' to assist in the rollout of the programme. They say they are being held back by more Government red tape.

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A GP on the frontline of Britain's great coronavirus vaccine push today revealed doctors have still not received doses that were supposed to arrive last month.

Dr Rosemary Leonard, an NHS family doctor who works in South London, said her practices were 'raring to go' and had been waiting on their first batch of vaccinations since December 28.

But she claimed the delivery date has been pushed back three times already, with the first doses now not due to arrive until January 15, more than a fortnight late.

Dr Leonard warned the vaccine roll out was becoming a 'postcode lottery for patients', and believes the delay is the result of 'central supply issues'.

Despite being just days into the rollout of the Oxford vaccine, there has already been finger-pointing between the Government, regulators and the jab's manufacturer AstraZeneca over who is to blame for the delays.

Matt Hancock and NHS bosses have suggested manufacturing has been too slow, while the Prime Minister has blamed the UK's stringent batch testing rules which mean every deliver of vaccine needs to be quality checked.

It comes as independent pharmacists begged the Government to let small chains dish out vaccinations to help Number 10 fulfill its ambitious vaccine promises, which will require jabbing a mammoth 3million Brits a week.

MailOnline has spoken to at least half a dozen membership bodies which claim there are 11,000 pharmacies 'ready, willing and able' to assist in the rollout of the programme. They say they are being held back by more Government red tape.

Meanwhile shocking footage from an intensive care unit has revealed the extent of the coronavirus crisis and the strain it is piling on the NHS.

Emotional doctors and nurses were seen struggling at London's University College Hospital while caring for the growing amount of coronavirus patients.

Operating theatres and some paediatric rooms have even been converted into intensive care units to deal with the ever-growing number of patients. Footage filmed by the BBC showed the alarming reality on hospital wards. 

One patient, Attila, 67, opened up about the trauma of suffering from the virus.  He said: 'It knocked me out. I didn't think I would make it. There is no oxygen around. It's very frightening.'

A doctor went on to explain that if the hospital is forced to keep increasing its capacity at this rate it will only be able to last another week before it cannot provide intensive health care to all patients.

The high street has also thrown its weight behind the rollout of the mass vaccination scheme to get life back to normal by spring. 

Bensons for Beds today revealed it has written to the Government, offering all 250 of its stores across the UK to serve as temporary vaccination centres. And the owner of the London nightclub G-A-Y claimed this morning he'd written to Westminster Council putting forward his venue.

So far only 1.3million people in the UK have been vaccinated with the Oxford/AstraZeneca or Pfizer/BioNTech jabs since the programme launched a month ago. There is a growing clamour today for the process to be ramped up dramatically - with concerns that local chemists and other facilities are not being used enough.

In an attempt to justify the decision to send England into its third national lockdown, Mr Johnson also said the ONS report published yesterday showing the extent of infections across the country as well as rising hospitalisations showed it was 'inescapable that the facts are changing and we must change our response'.

Dr Rosemary Leonard, an NHS family doctor who works in South London, said her practices were 'raring to go' and had been waiting on their first batch of vaccinations since December 28.
Britain was the first country to start vaccinating members of the public against Covid-19 and has now given jabs to more than 1.3million people, but has had to begin a controversial strategy of stretching the gaps between doses in a bid to protect the elderly from an out-of-control second wave (Pictured: Joan Barnes, 88, gets a vaccine at a drive-through in Manchester)

Dr Rosemary Leonard (left), an NHS family doctor who works in South London, said her practices were 'raring to go' and had been waiting on their first batch of vaccinations since December 28. But she claimed the delivery date has been pushed back three times already, with the first doses now not due to arrive until January 15, more than a fortnight late

Emotional doctors and nurses were seen struggling at London's University College Hospital while caring for the growing amount of coronavirus patients

Emotional doctors and nurses were seen struggling at London's University College Hospital while caring for the growing amount of coronavirus patients

Gavin Williamson confirms TEACHERS will decide GCSE and A-Level grades

Teachers will decide school pupils' GCSE, A-level and AS-level grades this summer after exams were scrapped due to Covid-related school closures, Education Secretary Gavin Williamson confirmed today.

The exams that were due to be sat in May and June this year will be replaced by school-based assessments, he told the Commons in a statement this afternoon. 

The under-pressure minister finally faced MPs amid chaos over the decision to close schools during the new lockdown.

He told MPs schools will be required to produce between three and five hours of online lessons per day while they are closed for up to three months.   

Telling MPs that 'our schools have not suddenly become unsafe', he said they are 'much better prepared than last March' to implement home-learning. 

He said: 'We have set out clear, legally binding requirements for schools to provide high-quality remote education. This is mandatory for all state-funded schools and will be enforced by Ofsted.

'We expect schools to provide between three and five hours teaching a day, depending on the child's age. If parents feel their child's school is not providing suitable remote education they should first raise their concerns with the teacher or headteacher and, failing that, report the matter to Ofsted.' 

He added: 'I will not apologise for being enthusiastic to ensure that we had been able to be in a position to roll out exams - but we do recognise where we are as a result of this pandemic, we have to take a different course and that is why we're taking the route we are.' 

He said the details of how the teacher assessments would work were being 'fine-turned' along with Ofsted, exam boards and teaching unions.

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He told MPs: 'So we had no choice but to return to a national lockdown in England with similar measures being adopted by the devolved administrations so that we can control this new variant until we can take the most likely victims out of its path with vaccines.' 

When Mr Johnson announced the lockdown on Monday night he said the measures would be reviewed in the middle of February. 

But the regulations being voted on by MPs this afternoon are due to last in law until the end of March. 

Mr Johnson tried to assuage Tory fears that the measures could still be in place in April but also insisted the nation must be 'extremely cautious about the timetable ahead'.  

He said: 'As was the case last spring our emergence from the lockdown cocoon will not be a big bang but a gradual unwrapping. 

'That is why the legislation this House will vote on later today runs until March 31, not because we expect the full national lockdown to continue until then but to allow a steady, controlled and evidence-led move down through the tiers on a regional basis, carefully brick-by-brick, as it were, breaking free of our confinement but without risking the hard won gains that our protections have given us.' 

Mr Johnson said schools will be the 'very first things to reopen' when lockdown measures can start to be eased. 

Sir Keir Starmer said Labour will support the new lockdown as he warned the UK is facing 'perhaps the darkest moment of the pandemic'.

But he said the situation is not the result of 'bad luck' and that it 'follows a pattern' as he accused the Government of failing to heed the warnings of experts and of repeatedly failing to act swiftly enough. 

'In the first wave of the pandemic the Government was repeatedly too slow to act and we ended 2020 with one of the highest death tolls in Europe and the worst-hit economy of major economies,' he said. 

'In the early summer, a Government report called 'Preparing for a challenging winter' warned of the risk of a second wave, of the virus mutating and of the NHS being overwhelmed. 

'It set out the preparations the Government needed to take, I put that report to the Prime Minister at PMQs in July.

'Throughout the autumn Track and Trace didn't work. Sage advised a circuit-break in September but the Prime Minister delayed for weeks before acting.

'We had a tiered system that didn't work and then we had the debacle of the delayed decision to change the rules on mixing at Christmas.

'The most recent advice about the situation we're now in was given on December 22 but no action was taken for two weeks until Monday of this week. 

'These are the decisions that have led us to the position we're now in – and the vaccine is now the only way out and we must all support the national effort to get it rolled out as quickly as possible.' 

There is growing anger on the Tory backbenches over the Government's handling of the pandemic.

Boris Johnson under fire over delayed border testing plan

Boris Johnson was under pressure today to sort out plans to demand people have a negative Covid test result before they enter Britain. 

Ministers have indicated that such a requirement is coming in a bid to block any influx of new variants of coronavirus after a South African strain was found in the UK.

But no firm details have yet been released and the Prime Minister came under fire in the Commons today over when they will be brought in and how much notice will be given. 

It came as new figures from Labour showed that just three in every 100 people arriving in the UK are being checked to see if they are complying with quarantine requirements.

Shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds has written to Priti Patel to demand 'an urgent review and improvement plan of quarantine arrangements'. 

He claimed the current system of checking up on only a fraction of people is leaving the UK 'defenceless and completely exposed' to importing coronavirus variants. 

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer took aim at the PM in the Commons today as politicians returned to vote on the new lockdown rules.

'The Prime Minister knows there is real concern about the rapid transmission of this disease. There are new strains being detected in South Africa, Denmark and elsewhere. The quarantine system isn't working,' Sir Keir said.

'The Prime Minister said yesterday that we will be bringing in extra measures at the border. I have to ask, why are those measures not introduced already? They have been briefed to the media for days but nothing has happened.'

Mr Johnson gave no details and only offered a bland statement, saying: 'I think it is vital we protect our borders and protect this country from the readmission of the virus from overseas and that is why we took tough action in respect of South Africa when the new variant became apparent there and we will continue to take whatever action is necessary to protect this country from the readmission of the virus.'  

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Some senior Conservative MPs had joined the Opposition in calling for the introduction of another national lockdown. 

But the idea of hardening the restrictions sparked fury from other Conservatives, who insisted the country's experience of the pandemic shows that lockdowns do not work and are crippling the economy. 

Tory MP Mark Harper, who chairs the Covid Recovery Group (CRG) of lockdown sceptics, has demanded a 'substantial relaxation' of the restrictions as soon as the four top priority groups have been vaccinated.

Writing in the Telegraph he said: 'Achieving this crucial goal must now become the central, overriding focus of the Government. 

'We need to start seeing daily vaccination reports updating MPs and the public to ensure we are making the progress we need.'

He added: 'Once these groups have been vaccinated, and have become immune to the disease, this should be a clear threshold for when a substantial relaxation in restrictions can begin.'

Tory colleague and fellow CRG member Steve Baker later tweeted that he agreed with Mr Harper, adding: 'Once the most vulnerable have been vaccinated, draconian restrictions must be substantially removed.'

Many Conservative MPs are pushing the Government to spell out the exact circumstances in which the lockdown will be lifted. 

Tory former minister Jeremy Wright told Mr Johnson in the Commons the Government needed to be 'more definitive' on when curbs could be eased. 

A furious Sir Desmond Swayne blasted the restrictions, telling Mr Johnson: 'Pubs can't compete with supermarkets for off sales, even within a household you can't play tennis or golf. 

'Notwithstanding the assault on liberty and livelihoods, why are these regulations pervaded by a pettifogging malice?' 

Mr Johnson replied: 'Pettifogging, yes, malicious, no. I am going to have to take the hit here, the intention is to stop the virus, protect the NHS and to save lives.

'To do that we have to engage in restricting transmission between human beings.' 

Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the influential 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers, said 'many' MPs are concerned at being asked to approve a lockdown which could last until the end of March.

Speaking in the Commons he said: 'I welcome the Prime Minister's assurance that this House will be consulted on the lifting of restrictions, should it be possible before the end of March, but can I say to him that many of us are concerned at being asked to approve a lockdown which could continue until March 31.

'Can I ask (Mr Johnson) to reconsider and to offer the House a vote at the end of January and at the end of February as well, not on whether to lift restrictions, but on whether to continue them or not?'

The 25 per cent of deaths caused by Covid-19 (shown graph right) is the highest proportion so far during the second wave, and it means that the total number of people to have died in that week is significantly higher than at the same time in previous years (graph left)

The 25 per cent of deaths caused by Covid-19 (shown graph right) is the highest proportion so far during the second wave, and it means that the total number of people to have died in that week is significantly higher than at the same time in previous years (graph left)

NHS statistics show that it is rare for people under the age of 40 to die of Covid-19, with 100 of the 17,572 fatalities in November and December in that age group

NHS statistics show that it is rare for people under the age of 40 to die of Covid-19, with 100 of the 17,572 fatalities in November and December in that age group

Tony Blair says UK needs to accelerate Covid vaccine scheme 

Former prime minister Tony Blair today said the UK needs to dramatically accelerate its coronavirus vaccination programme in order to lift lockdown rules in the spring.

Claiming 'it's not complicated' on live TV this morning as he launched a 'blue-print' for improving the country's vaccine roll-out, Mr Blair suggested restrictions could ease 'significantly' in February if the NHS scales up to millions of jabs every week.

As supplies flow into the country in the coming weeks, Mr Blair said, officials should strain every sinew to make sure every dose is used as soon as possible. He said there should be pop-up vaccine centres and mobile ones, that pharmacies should be used, and volunteers recruited en masse.

Polling stations, pubs and offices should be used as hubs and supplies could provide as many as three million doses per week by the end of February, the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change said in a report.

By the end of February, the institute claims that half the population could have had the first dose of a vaccine to protect them from Covid-19. Britain has only pledged to vaccinate 13million of the most vulnerable residents by the middle of next month.

Mr Blair has become involved in the vaccine policy after he was the first to publicly suggest restricting jabs to one dose to begin with and stretching them further, avoiding holding back supplies to ensure people get a second one. This has since become the official policy of the Government's roll-out.

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Mr Johnson replied: 'I can't believe it will be until the end of March that the House has to wait before having a new vote and a new discussion of the measures we have to take.'

Conservative former minister Sir Edward Leigh said many of his colleagues who will vote in favour of the rules 'out of loyalty or because we want to preserve the Government's authority' are 'worried' about successive lockdowns being 'less and less effective'. 

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson is facing a Cabinet split over his decision to close schools across England. 

The Prime Minister initially sided with hawks led by Education Secretary Gavin Williamson who wanted classes to remain open.

But he switched to agree with doves including Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Michel Gove, the Cabinet Office Minister, after being presented with new data showing the scale of the problem facing the nation, the Financial Times reported.   

Mr Johnson's statement to MPs came after the Government's vaccines tsar today admitted that the NHS will need to be giving around three million vaccine doses a week by February to meet the PM's target.    

Nadhim Zahawi said the goal of covering more than 13million of the most vulnerable within seven weeks was 'very stretching' – but can be delivered.

There is a growing clamour today for the vaccination process to be ramped up - with concerns that local chemists and other facilities are not being used enough. 

So far around 1.3 million people in the UK have been vaccinated with the Oxford/AstraZeneca or Pfizer/BioNTech jabs and Mr Zahawi said there will be a 'massive acceleration' in the coming days.

Challenged that the weekly figure would need to be more like three million than two million to hit the PM's target, Mr Zahawi nodded and said: 'You're going to see that increase – the NHS have got a very clear plan.

'We've got a fantastic team working, seven days a week, all hours to deliver this.

'No doubt, it is a stretching target. But I think it's one that we should absolutely look to deliver.'

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2021-01-06 22:29:00Z
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COVID-19: GCSE and A-level exams to be replaced by teacher assessments in England this summer - Sky News

Teacher assessments will replace GCSE and A-level exams in England this summer, the education secretary has announced.

"This year, we're going to put our trust in teachers, rather than algorithms," Gavin Williamson told MPs in the Commons.

Setting out his plans for students as MPs prepared to vote on England's latest national lockdown, Mr Williamson said that a form of teacher-assessed grades will be used, with training to ensure grades are awarded "fairly and consistently".

His announcement comes after the government shut schools and colleges across the country until mid-February.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson addresses the House of Commons.
Image: Gavin Williamson has set out a plan for schools in England

Vulnerable children and those whose parents are key workers can continue going to school, and nurseries and childminders can remain open.

University students are not able to return to campus but can continue learning remotely.

Announcing that GCSEs, A-levels and AS-level exams will not go ahead, Mr Williamson said: "Last year, all four nations of the United Kingdom found their arrangements for awarding grades did not deliver what they needed, with the impact felt painfully by students and their parents.

More from Covid-19

"Although exams are the fairest way we have of assessing what a student knows, the impact of this pandemic now means that it is not possible to have these exams this year.

"I can confirm that GCSEs, A-levels and AS-level exams will not go ahead this summer."

He also said that SATs will not be going ahead this year across England.

The grading of GCSE and A-level students in England became a fiasco last summer when end-of-year exams were cancelled amid school closures.

Thousands of A-level students had their results downgraded from school estimates by a controversial algorithm, before Ofqual - the exams regulator for England - announced a U-turn, allowing them to use teachers' predictions.

Mr Williamson acknowledged that exams are the "fairest way" of assessing what a student knows, but said the impact of the pandemic meant they could no longer go ahead.

He confirmed his daughter is one of the students who will now not be sitting her GCSE exams this year, and added he hoped today's statement had given students and parents "a clear sense of certainty and direction of where we are going".

"We will also be following this up with further detailed consultation by Ofqual that will be launched next week," he said.

On school closures he said that schools were "much better prepared than last March" to implement home-learning and that he expects schools to provide between three to five hours of teaching a day.

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Boris Johnson said on Wednesday the lifting of restrictions would be a "gradual process" and not a "big bang" - and that schools would be "the very first things to reopen".

"That moment may come after the February half-term, although we should remain extremely cautious about the timetable ahead," the prime minister told MPs.

Education Select Committee chairman Robert Halfon earlier told Sky News the situation regarding schools was "a mess".

"I think now we have to move on and make sure we have an exam system that is a level playing field for students and fair to the disadvantaged," he said.

Downing Street said later that Mr Johnson continues to have confidence in Mr Williamson and believes he is the best person for the job.

The prime minister's press secretary Allegra Stratton told reporters Mr Williamson had produced a "full and comprehensive" package of measures for children who will be educated at home.

"It's a huge brief and the prime minister believes the education secretary is doing it to his utmost ability," Ms Stratton added.

The other three nations are taking a similar approach, with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon imposing a lockdown on Scotland for the rest of January and the closure of schools until February.

Schools and colleges will be closed in Wales until at least 18 January and move to online learning, with GCSE and A-level exams already cancelled.

In Northern Ireland, pupils will learn remotely until the mid-term break and all scheduled GCSE and A-level exams have also been cancelled.

Analysis: Williamson comes out fighting

By Jon Craig, chief political correspondent

He has been described as "beleaguered", "embattled" and "hapless", accused of presiding over a "shambles" and a "fiasco", and faced calls to be sacked.

But in a Commons statement that he must have feared would be as painful as a severe caning in the headmaster's study, a defiant Gavin Williamson came out fighting.

The education secretary's inevitable - and widely predicted - schools and exams U-turn won't mean the end of the anxiety and fury of teachers and parents. But it has probably bought him some time.

He has attempted to mitigate the disaster of school closures by throwing money at the problem, which was probably his only option given the gravity of the massive disruption now being inflicted on pupils.

So, there's cash not just for laptops but also food parcels or free school meals. Clearly Mr Williamson wants to avoid yet another battle with star footballer and campaigner Marcus Rashford.

There's also an attempt to make sure remote learning happens by making it a legal requirement. Will that make any difference, though?

Marcus Rashford of Manchester United in action during the Premier League match against Leeds United at Old Trafford on December 20, 2020
Image: There's cash for free school meals - Mr Williamson wants to avoid another battle with footballer Marcus Rashford, says Sky's Jon Craig

Labour's Kate Green claimed 1.78 million children don't have access to a laptop or iPad, which is an alarming figure.

The point has been made before, but remote learning is all very well for the children of affluent, middle class white-collar professionals working from home, but hardly ideal for those of hard-up parents in low-paid jobs who can't afford to not work.

But it's the uncertainty over exams that remains the biggest problem and was a concern raised with Mr Williamson by some Conservative MPs.

There must also be a worry that children who were due to sit GCSEs and A-levels are heading for three Ds: de-motivated, dis-incentivised and demoralised.

Mr Williamson probably won't survive the prime minister's Cabinet reshuffle, whenever that comes, at least in his current job.

His supporters will claim the pandemic has placed him in an extremely difficult, if not impossible, position.

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PM: Country entering 'tough final stretch'

Many MPs will also argue that Boris Johnson should have over-ruled him and sided with Matt Hancock and Michael Gove and acted earlier rather than dither and let the indecision drift towards inevitable U-turns.

Many Tories are also furious with Mr Williamson for being too soft on what they regard as the "Trots" running the teaching unions.

When he was defence secretary, it was claimed government insiders called Mr Williamson "Private Pike" after the gormless Dad's Army character.

Now his critics would no doubt argue he's blundering from U-turn to U-turn like Captain Mainwaring.

However, after this Commons statement, the criticism from Tory MPs and the Opposition could have been worse.

Some Tory MPs - including the often-critical Education Select Committee chairman Robert Halfon - actually praised him for some of his announcements.

And at the end of his response to Kate Green, Mr Williamson became surprisingly animated and passionate. At least - like Captain Mainwaring, perhaps - he's not going down without a fight.

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2021-01-06 20:09:48Z
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