Minggu, 10 Januari 2021

Matt Hancock admits it is 'highly likely' Britons will face annual Covid jabs - Daily Mail

Vaccines EVERY year: Matt Hancock admits it is 'highly likely' Britons will face annual Covid jabs as he reveals 200,000 people a day are being inoculated and every adult will have been offered a shot by autumn

  • Health Secretary said UK may need 'dual vaccination programme', with jabs to protect against flu and Covid
  • Today he revealed 200,000 people a day are now receiving first jab as UK ramps up to 2million-a-week target
  • But Professor Devi Sridhar today warned up to 90 per cent of Britons would need vaccine for heard immunity
  • She warned this could take until next Autumn, but experts do not yet know how long vaccine protection lasts 
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Britons are 'highly likely' to need a Covid vaccination every year for the 'foreseeable' future, Matt Hancock has today warned, as he also revealed 200,000 people a day are now receiving their first dose of the jab.

The Health Secretary said the UK could require an 'dual vaccination programme', with yearly jabs to protect against flu and coronavirus.

It comes as a top public expert today warned as many of 90 per cent of Britons would need to be protected against the virus in order to achieve heard immunity.

Professor Devi Sridhar said such a roll-out would take until next Autumn to complete. She warned that, with scientists still unsure about how long vaccine protection lasts, those inoculated now could lose their immunity by that time.

Meanwhile, in another blow to Britons, a top epidemiologist said normal life in the UK may not be able to resume even after the most vulnerable people were vaccinated - saying it was 'likely' social distancing could still be in place by the end of the year.

However, in a glimmer of hope, Mr Hancock today revealed the UK's vaccination roll-out was on course to ramp-up to 2million jabs a week.

He said the UK was now vaccinating 200,00 people a day and was rapidly approaching the rate needed to cover the most vulnerable by the middle of February.

In a further boost, the Health Secretary also revealed every adult would be offered - but not given - a Covid jab by Autumn. 

The Health Secretary said the UK could require an 'dual vaccination programme', with yearly jabs to protect against flu and coronavirus

The Health Secretary said the UK could require an 'dual vaccination programme', with yearly jabs to protect against flu and coronavirus

Britons are 'highly likely' to need a Covid vaccination every year for the 'foreseeable' future, Matt Hancock (pictured) has today warned
Professor Devi Sridhar (pictured) warned as many of 90 per cent of Britons would need to be protected against the virus in order to achieve heard immunity

Britons are 'highly likely' to need a Covid vaccination every year for the 'foreseeable' future, Matt Hancock (pictured left) has today warned. Professor Devi Sridhar (pictured right) warned as many of 90 per cent of Britons would need to be protected against the virus in order to achieve heard immunity

Speaking to Sophie Ridge on Sky News, he said: 'At the moment we're running over 200,000 people being vaccinated every day.

'We've now vaccinated around a third of the over-80s in this country, so we are making significant progress, but there's still further expansion to go.'

He said the efforts would be further boosted by the opening of mass vaccination centres across the the country this week. 

Britain must go into an 'Asia-style' lockdown NOW with places of worship closed, hotels commandeered as isolation centres and masks worn in every public space, experts warn 

Britain must go into an 'Asia-style' lockdown now with nurseries and places of worship closed, hotels commandeered as isolation centres and masks worn in every public space, experts have warned.

Former WHO director Anthony Costello said only 'a total clampdown' would succeed in stopping the mutant strain of coronavirus ripping through the country.

Professor of operational research at UCL Christina Pagel added that she thinks the current lockdown restrictions are likely to fail and measures seen in China and Vietnam should be brought in.

In Wuhan, where the virus originated, authorities would go door-to-door to monitor people and made sure people with Covid self-isolated.

Meanwhile in Vietnam people who were infected and those going into the country had to quarantine for two weeks.

Despite around 90 per cent of the UK population sticking to regulations, the streets and public transport have remained busy this week, allowing the virus to spread.

As a result, ministers are considering introducing tougher measures as part of the crackdown, including possibly making face masks mandatory in busy outdoor areas.

Prof Costello told the Mirror: 'We are in a national crisis with a pandemic out of control. We should have no nurseries open, no synagogues, no churches, no mosques. We should have compulsory masks, two-metre distancing.

'We have to take this really seriously – that's what Asian states did. The longer we allow it to go on transmitting, the quicker we are going to get a resistant virus to a vaccine, then we are in real doo-doo.'

Prof Pagel added: 'We have to start thinking about mandatory isolation, like in China and Vietnam. We have lots of empty hotels. We could use that space.'

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But Mr Hancock also warned that it is 'highly likely' people will be vaccinated against Covid annually, as with the flu.

He told Sky News: 'I think it's highly likely that there will be a dual-vaccination programme for the foreseeable, this is the medium-term, of flu and Covid.'

He added: 'Flu vaccination rates are at their highest level ever. Over 80 per cent of the over-65s have been vaccinated for flu this year. That's the biggest increase, a jump on last year when it was around 70 per cent.

'That's very good news. It's good news for two reasons. Firstly, to protect people against flu and secondly because it shows the vast, vast majority of over-65s are up for getting vaccinated.'

Mr Hancock was later quizzed on BBC's Andrew Marr on his plans to roll-out the vaccine to the wider-public - beyond the current high-priority list. 

He was asked on the BBC show if the Government could ‘vaccinate everyone’ by the autumn and replied 'yes'.

However, Mr Hancock then clarified: ‘Every adult will be offered a vaccine by the autumn, absolutely.'

Meanwhile, Professor Sridhar, chair of public health at Edinburgh University, today described the UK's three approved inoculations - Oxford/AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Moderna - as a 'bright spot'.

But she also warned Times Radio it was not yet clear how long immunity lasts for, if the vaccines stop people from being infectious or how much of the population would need to be covered to provide herd immunity.  

She said: 'If you really want to get to some sort of true herd immunity, you're looking at 80-90% of the population, which even with our current roll-out would take you into next fall.

'We need to make sure at that point, the people who have been vaccinated now still have immunity.'

She added: 'For me, the vaccine is definitely there, we have to continue roll-out, keep saving lives through protecting vulnerable people with that.

'But it's not a strategy in and of itself and relying on it alone is highly, highly risky, especially with all the new variants and mutations.

'We need to have a plan and the vaccine supports that plan but it's just your plan.' 

In another blow to hopes of the vaccine restoring normality to British life, other experts warned social distancing measures could have to remain in place throughout the year.  

Professor Peter Horby, chair of the UK government's New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group, said even after vaccinating the most vulnerable parts of the population things will not necessarily return to normal.

He told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'I don't think it will return us to normal.

'There will still be a large number of people being infected, and although the absolute risks of someone under the age of 80 dying or ending up in hospital are low, with a large number of infections that still translates into a lot of people and so we're going to have to manage the virus, with social distancing measures as well as vaccination for the coming months.'

Asked about the likelihood of social distancing measures being in place next winter, he said: 'I think that's likely. I think it very much depends on how well we can scale up the vaccine programme and how quickly we can get it out to a substantial proportion of the population.' 

Professor Horby also echoed Mr Hancock's comments that people would have to get a coronavirus vaccine 'every few years' if it does need to be updated against new variants, and added that the virus 'will not go away'.

He said: 'This one (virus) I think will not go away. We're going to have to live with it but that may change significantly.

'It may well become more of an endemic virus, that's with us all the time and may cause some seasonal pressures and some excess deaths, but is not causing the huge disruption that we're seeing now 

However, he said the data about the effectiveness of the vaccine against new variants of the disease was 'encouraging'.

It comes as mass vaccination hubs are to be opened across the country next week in a bid to significantly ramp-up the UK's vaccine roll-out.

The mass vaccination hubs - located in Newcastle, Manchester, London, Stevenage, Surrey, Bristol and Birmingham - can treat up to four people per minute and will work alongside GP surgeries and other facilities to try and hit the Prime Minister's ambitious target.

The hubs will be based in sports venues, conference centres and a science park. 

Invitations to receive the vaccine for those over the age of 80 are also now being sent out. Previous invitations were for those over 90 and key workers. 

Empty chairs were placed a metre apart in the waiting area of the vast stadium in Bristol, which is usually home to Bristol City F.C. and the Bristol Bears

Empty chairs were placed a metre apart in the waiting area of the vast stadium in Bristol, which is usually home to Bristol City F.C. and the Bristol Bears

Photographs of Ashton Gate Stadium show desks hidden behind partitions to allow those being vaccinated some privacy from those awaiting the jab

Photographs of Ashton Gate Stadium show desks hidden behind partitions to allow those being vaccinated some privacy from those awaiting the jab

Vaccination booths inside Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol. It comes after Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted earlier this week the vaccination plan needs to speed up as figures revealed only one in 10 care home residents, and 14 per cent of staff, had been vaccinated so far

Vaccination booths inside Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol. It comes after Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted earlier this week the vaccination plan needs to speed up as figures revealed only one in 10 care home residents, and 14 per cent of staff, had been vaccinated so far

Above are the locations of the seven mass vaccination centres that will begin operating from next week

Above are the locations of the seven mass vaccination centres that will begin operating from next week

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh are given Covid vaccine: 94-year-old Monarch and Prince Philip, 99, are inoculated at Windsor Castle 

The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh have been given the Covid-19 vaccination at Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace revealed yesterday.

News of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh's vaccination is unusual from Buckingham Palace, which rarely comments on the private health matters of the royal couple

News of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh's vaccination is unusual from Buckingham Palace, which rarely comments on the private health matters of the royal couple

The Monarch, 94, and Prince Philip, 99, have joined more than 1.5million people across Britain who have been given the jab since the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approved for use in December. 

The UK has since permitted the use of the Oxford University/AstraZeneca jab, alongside an inoculation against coronavirus developed by Moderna.   

News of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh's vaccination is unusual from Buckingham Palace, which rarely comments on the private health matters of the royal couple.    

It is understood the Queen decided the information should be made public to prevent inaccuracies and further speculation.

A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: 'The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh have today received Covid-19 vaccinations.' 

However, when asked by MailOnline, the palace refused to indicate which out of the two available vaccines the couple had been given.   

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Yesterday it was revealed The Queen, 94, and Prince Philip, 99, were also revealed to be among 1.5million people across Britain who had been given the jab since the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approved for use in December.

The UK has since permitted the use of the Oxford University/AstraZeneca jab, alongside an inoculation against coronavirus developed by Moderna.

News of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh's vaccination is unusual from Buckingham Palace, which rarely comments on the private health matters of the royal couple.

It is understood the Queen decided the information should be made public to prevent inaccuracies and further speculation.

In its biggest ever vaccination drive, Britain is hoping to get around 13million people immunised against Covid-19, focusing on elderly people, health and care workers and people with serious illnesses, by the middle of February.

If this is achieved the current national lockdown – the toughest since March 2020 – may be eased.

But experts have warned they will need to ramp up the roll-out in order to hit the ambitious target.

Politicians have been trying to shift blame for disruptions to the initial supply of Oxford and Pfizer vaccines, with Boris Johnson first blaming quality checks done by the MHRA and Matt Hancock later trying to pin difficulties on limited manufacturing capacity.

The Health Secretary said in Parliament: 'The rate-limiting factor is the amount of the actual juice available, the actual vaccine, which is not manufactured like a chemical it is effectively... a biological product.' He described the vaccine manufacturing process as 'complicated and difficult'.

And Britain felt a pang of envy as Europe approved the Moderna vaccine and will start to get deliveries of the 95 per cent effective jab from next week, while Brits must wait until March because officials didn't pre-order it.

It comes as one expert today warned Britain must go into an 'Asia-style' lockdown now with nurseries and places of worship closed, hotels commandeered as isolation centres and masks worn in every public space.

Former WHO director Anthony Costello said only 'a total clampdown' would succeed in stopping the mutant strain of coronavirus ripping through the country.

Professor of operational research at UCL Christina Pagel added that she thinks the current lockdown restrictions are likely to fail and measures seen in China and Vietnam should be brought in.

In Wuhan, where the virus originated, authorities would go door-to-door to monitor people and made sure people with Covid self-isolated.

Meanwhile in Vietnam people who were infected and those going into the country had to quarantine for two weeks.

Despite around 90 per cent of the UK population sticking to regulations, the streets and public transport have remained busy this week, allowing the virus to spread.

As a result, ministers are considering introducing tougher measures as part of the crackdown, including possibly making face masks mandatory in busy outdoor areas. 

Former WHO director Anthony Costello said only 'a total clampdown' would succeed in stopping the mutant strain of coronavirus ripping through the country
Professor of operational research at UCL Christina Pagel added that she thinks the current lockdown restrictions are likely to fail and measures seen in China and Vietnam should be brought in.

Former WHO director Anthony Costello (left) said only 'a total clampdown' would succeed in stopping the mutant strain of coronavirus ripping through the country. Professor of operational research at UCL Christina Pagel (right) added that she thinks the current lockdown restrictions are likely to fail and measures seen in China and Vietnam should be brought in.

In Wuhan, where the virus originated, authorities would go door-to-door to monitor people and made sure people with Covid self-isolated (pictured, China in February last year)

In Wuhan, where the virus originated, authorities would go door-to-door to monitor people and made sure people with Covid self-isolated (pictured, China in February last year)

Three police officers wearing face masks question a man sitting on a bench in St James's Park in central London this morning

Three police officers wearing face masks question a man sitting on a bench in St James's Park in central London this morning

Despite around 90 per cent of the population 'overwhelmingly' sticking to regulations, the streets and public transport have remained busy this week, allowing the virus to spread. Pictured: Clapham today

Despite around 90 per cent of the population 'overwhelmingly' sticking to regulations, the streets and public transport have remained busy this week, allowing the virus to spread. Pictured: Clapham today

Prof Costello told the Mirror: 'We are in a national crisis with a pandemic out of control. We should have no nurseries open, no synagogues, no churches, no mosques. We should have compulsory masks, two-metre distancing.

'We have to take this really seriously – that's what Asian states did. The longer we allow it to go on transmitting, the quicker we are going to get a resistant virus to a vaccine, then we are in real doo-doo.'

Prof Pagel added: 'We have to start thinking about mandatory isolation, like in China and Vietnam. We have lots of empty hotels. We could use that space.'

Professor Kevin Fenton, London regional director of Public Health England, said yesterday the more coronavirus patients the NHS has to deal with, the more difficult it is to keep other services open.

No more warnings: Police vow to get even tougher with lockdown fines

Police are vowing to get even tougher with lockdown fines amid calls from scientists for even stricter restrictions, while No10 pushes an intimidating new ad campaign to try and arrest the spiralling number of coronavirus cases across the country. 

Derbyshire Police faced criticism yesterday for taking the lockdown crackdown too far after officers swooped on two friends for driving just seven miles to go for a walk at a beauty spot.

As a result, the 'intimidating' force is reviewing its Covid operations after getting clarification about the rules, with West Mercia Police also mocked for threatening to fine people £200 for playing in the snow.

Nevertheless, the message from government sources today is that police should be focusing more on enforcing rather than explaining rules, now nearly 10 months since the very first restrictions came into effect.

This was echoed by Wiltshire Police's chief constable, Kier Pritchard, who wrote in the Gazette and Herald:  'Although we will continue to police with consent and in a proportionate way, my officers will move to enforcement much quicker when confronted with people clearly breaching the rules.

'Up until now, police forces have focused on engagement, reinforcing the messaging within our communities and encouraging the public to comply in the first instance, only reverting to enforcement when we are faced with deliberate or repeated breaches.

'We will continue to engage with our communities but my officers will quickly move to enforcement against those who are flagrantly breaching the rules.'

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He told BBC Breakfast: 'I would encourage people to read, look at the programmes that you're running on TV where you're interviewing doctors, where you're interviewing patients who've had this very severe disease and are suffering from the long-term effects of it

'This is the reality and that is the truth. So the advice would be listen, read, but stay at home. Protect yourself, protect your families.'

The concerns have sparked suggestions from other experts that the current level of restrictions are not robust enough to combat the ongoing soar in cases.

Susan Michie, professor of health psychology at University College London who advises the SAGE committee of experts, told BBC Radio Four's Today programme: 'This is quite a lax lockdown because we've still got a lot of household contact, people go in and out of other people's houses if they're a cleaner, a non-essential trade person or a nanny.

'We also have mass gatherings in terms of religious events and nurseries being open, and you have this wide definition of critical workers so we have 30-50% of classes full up at the moment and very busy public transport going to and from these things.

'It's definitely too lax. If you compare ourselves with March we have the winter season and the virus survives for longer in the cold plus people spend more time indoors and we now know aerosol transmission which happens indoors is a very big source of transmission for this virus.

'Secondly, we have this new variant which is 50-70% more infectious. You put those two things together alongside the NHS being in crisis, we should have a stricter, rather than a less strict lockdown than we had in March.'

Professor Michie's concerns were echoed by Dr Adam Kucharski, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who said the new variant should be treated as a 'new pandemic within a pandemic'. 

The Sage member told Today: 'The early signals we're seeing are suggesting that there is probably less movement in the population than there was in November but perhaps slightly more than there was in April, and obviously that's concerning because, with this new variant, essentially each interaction we have has become riskier than it was before.

'Even if we went back to that last spring level of reduction in contacts, we couldn't be confident we would see the same effects as we saw last year because of the increased transmission.

'To some extent we can think of this as a new pandemic within a pandemic.

'From the data coming out, this is a very serious threat and new data from PHE (Public Health England) that came out yesterday suggested that that risk per contact is probably 40-50% higher than it was.

'So both for the UK, and many other countries as well, we need to get away from this idea that we're going to see a repeat of what happened last spring with our behaviours and really face the possibility that this is much riskier and we're going to have to work much harder to reduce the impact.'

MailOnline has contacted Oxford Vaccine Group, Pfizer, Moderna and the Department of Health for comment on the length of time Covid vaccines will offer protection.

A recent post on America's Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's website said experts would not know about the length of protection from vaccines until there is more data available. 

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2021-01-10 11:01:00Z
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Covid-19: Every adult to be offered vaccine by autumn says Matt Hancock - BBC News

A virus expert says coronavirus is not likely to go away, but vaccines mean we will be able to live with it in a similar way to flu.

Professor Peter Horby tell Andrew Marr the early signs from vaccination are "very encouraging" and people should not feel like they need to "hide under the duvet".

"We've got these vaccines, they're being rolled out they're absolutely critical," he says.

"There's now three approved in the UK and - although there are some concerns and we have to be very vigilant that the new viruses don't escape immunity from the vaccine so far - the data we have is encouraging that the vaccines work just as well."

He says every virus mutates to create different strains but vaccines are updated to keep up with them.

"When there's a lot of immunity in the population, whether that's a vaccine or natural, we will see viruses emerge that escape that immunity.

"In the longer term, that will happen and we we will have to update that vaccine.

"But we do that every year with influenza so I don't think that's going to be a problem in the short term."

He says scientists do not yet know how long immunity lasts and therefore how often the population will need to be re-vaccinated.

He says: "The one virus we've managed to get rid of, smallpox, had very different characteristics to this virus... this one will not go away.

"I think we are going to have to live with it... it may well become more of an endemic.

"It will be with us all the time and may cause some seasonal pressures and some excess deaths but will not cause the huge disruption that we are seeing now."

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2021-01-10 10:00:38Z
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Thirteen men caught playing cards in social club fined £200 for breaching Covid lockdown rules after police - The Sun

THIRTEEN men have each been slapped with a £200 fine after they were caught playing cards when police raided a social club.

Video footage shows the moment several officers found the men breaking the Covid lockdown rules in Hackney.

Police found 13 men breaking the rules
Police found 13 men breaking the rulesCredit: Metropolitan Police

The police were called to the social club on Stoke Newington Road after they received reports of several men entering the venue.

When officers arrived they found 13 men playing cards.

All 13 men were issued with Fixed Penalty Notices.

New guidance has been issued to chief constables as part of a tough new crackdown on coronavirus lockdown flouters.

Those holding, or involved in holding, an illegal gathering of more than 30 people risk a police-issued fine of £10,000.

Anyone caught by cops without a reasonable excuse could be slapped with a £200 fixed penalty notice for their first offence, with this doubling for further offences up to a maximum of £6,400.

'VERY DISAPPOINTING'

Chief Inspector Pete Shaw, from the Central East BCU, said: "My officers work incredibly hard, putting themselves at risk of catching this virus to keep those in Hackney & Tower Hamlets safe. 

“It is very disappointing when officers have to deal with groups of people who appear to think that these rules do not apply to them.

"To make it very clear, anyone who is seen to be breaking the rules to hold or attend a house party or an unlicensed music event can expect to be fined by the police and the event shut down. 

“We need to be doing everything we can as a community to try and keep ourselves, our family and friends as safe as possible and to reduce the burden on the NHS.”

Video footage shows the moment several officers found the men
Video footage shows the moment several officers found the menCredit: Metropolitan Police
All 13 men were issued with Fixed Penalty Notices.
All 13 men were issued with Fixed Penalty Notices.Credit: Metropolitan Police

'RULES SAVE LIVES'

Yesterday Home Secretary Priti Patel defended cops amid concern over tougher enforcement after two women claimed they were surrounded and fined £200 each for driving five miles to walk in a park. 

Derbyshire Police sparked outrage by fining Jessica Allen and Eliza Moore for walking near Foremark Reservoir.

But Ms Patel said: “Enforcing these rules saves lives. It is as simple as that.

"Officers will continue to engage with the public across the country and will not hesitate to take action when necessary.”

The crackdown comes amid fears that public compliance with restrictions is lower than the first lockdown in March last year, which successfully reduced the rate of infection. 

What you could be fined for

You could face a fine for:

  • Being out of your home without a reasonable excuse as below
  • Travelling abroad or going on holiday during the lockdown period - as this is not a reasonable excuse
  • Breaking Covid rules by having others outside your household inside your home
  • Meeting people outside your household outside - unless it's one person for exercise alone
  • Hosting a gathering - this could see you get a fine of up to £10,000
  • Businesses or venues can be fined up to £10,000 too for continuing to operate despite being ordered to shut
  • Not wearing a face covering on public transport or in shops

Reasonable excuses for leaving your home include:

  • Work: If you have to go to work as you really can't work from home, this will be allowed. Key workers such as those who work for the police, or NHS, will be permitted to do so
  • School: only for the kids of key workers or vulnerable pupils
  • Exercise: Boris will continue to allow unlimited exercise outdoors. That means people can carry on going for walks, runs and other forms of exercise outdoors if they wish. You can do that with your household, support bubble or on your own with one person from another household
  • Food, drink & supplies: People will still be allowed out to collect food and drink - such as at the supermarket, or take-aways
  • Medical appointments: Everyone will be urged to continue to attend hospital and doctor appointments if they need to
  • To escape injury or harm; those at risk of harm are allowed to leave their current home and move elsewhere
  • To provide care for vulnerable people, or as a volunteer: people will still be allowed to travel to care for people who need it, or attend volunteer work too

And West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner David Jamieson had last week urged the government to give police powers of entry to help “enforce the new regulations more easily”.

Mr Jamieson said: “For the small minority of people who refuse entry to police officers and obstruct their work, the power of entry would seem to be a useful tool.

“I have raised this issue with the policing minister previously and clarity on the power of entry would help police officers enforce the new regulations more easily.”

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2021-01-10 09:12:36Z
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Sabtu, 09 Januari 2021

The race to vaccinate the UK out of lockdown: Everything you need to know about 'super-vax' centres - Daily Mail

The race to vaccinate the UK out of lockdown: Everything you need to know as the first 'super-vax' centres - capable of inoculating up to 3,000 a day - prepare to open their doors

  • The UK’s first ‘super-vax’ centres will open their doors to the public tomorrow 
  • Already 1.5million people have been vaccinated, mostly with the Pfizer jab  
  • It marks start of a fightback to suppress Covid-19 and our lives return to normal

The UK’s vaccination programme will take a major step forward tomorrow as the first ‘super-vax’ centres, capable of inoculating up to 3,000 people a day, open their doors.

Already 1.5million people have been vaccinated, mostly with the Pfizer jab. Now the mass rollout of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine heralds a blitz of inoculations. 

With more than 1,300 people dying each day, and the pandemic raging across the country, health workers are locked in a race to protect as many vulnerable people from the deadly virus as quickly as possible.

And with a huge acceleration planned this week, tomorrow could mark the start of a fightback that finally suppresses Covid-19 and, eventually, allows our lives to return to normal.

 THE SPRING OFFENSIVE

After the plan to inoculate the 15 million most vulnerable people by February 15, the UK’s vaccination programme will target the remaining groups who are most at risk of dying from the virus.

NHS bosses hope this second cohort of more than 16 million people will receive the jab by Easter. If so, it will mean that between 90 and 99 per cent of those at risk of dying from Covid-19 will have been protected. The rest of the population – those under 50 – will then be vaccinated.

Those in the second cohort who will receive the jab during the Spring Offensive are:

  • All people aged 65 and over (3.4 million)
  • All individuals aged 16 to 64 with underlying health conditions that put them at higher risk of serious disease and mortality
  • Everyone aged 60 and over (3.7 million)
  • Anybody aged 55 years and over (4.3 million)
  • All aged 50 years and over (4.7 million)

HOW THE TARGET WILL BE MET

Prime Minister Boris Johnson (pictured) has set the target of offering vaccination to the UK’s 15 million most vulnerable people by February 15. So far, almost 1.5million have received the vaccine

Prime Minister Boris Johnson (pictured) has set the target of offering vaccination to the UK’s 15 million most vulnerable people by February 15. So far, almost 1.5million have received the vaccine

Boris Johnson has set the hugely ambitious target of offering vaccination to the UK’s 15 million most vulnerable people by February 15 – in 36 days. 

The latest figures, from Thursday, show the NHS had administered 1,468,000 vaccinations over 30 days, or 48,933 daily. 

The PM has vowed that this will rise to more than 200,000 a day by Friday. 

But to hit his 15 million target, the daily rate needs to be almost 347,000. Every day this is missed, the daily requirement goes up.

WHO IS FIRST IN LINE FOR THE JABS? 

Those due to receive the jab in the next five weeks include: Care home residents, frontline NHS and social care workers, those aged 70-plus and those considered to be ‘clinically extremely vulnerable’. 

Of those who have died of Covid-19, 88 per cent are in these groups, All 420,000 elderly social care residents in England and Wales are at the front of the queue and should receive their vaccination by January 31. 

One in four people aged over 80 have received at least one dose.

THE STORY SO FAR 

On December 8, Margaret Keenan, then 90, pictured, became the first person in the world outside clinical trials to be given the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. 

Within a fortnight, an estimated 500,000 people had been given the jab, and the UK has ordered a total of 40 million doses.

Margaret Keenan, then 90, pictured, became the first person in the world outside clinical trials to be given the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on December 8

Margaret Keenan, then 90, pictured, became the first person in the world outside clinical trials to be given the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on December 8

Last Monday, Brian Pinker, 82, became the first patient to receive the ‘game-changing’ vaccine developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca, which can be kept in a fridge. The UK has 100 million doses on order.

Another 17 million doses of the newly approved Moderna vaccine are expected in the spring.

The UK has outstripped the EU: Four times as many people have been vaccinated here than in Germany, and 300 times more than in France.

ARMY'S RAPID REACTION FORCE

Britain’s Armed Forces have established a ‘vaccine quick reaction force’ of troops who will rush stocks anywhere they are needed.

It comprises 130 personnel split into 21 small teams. They are tasked with ensuring that vaccination centres across England do not run out of available jabs and will urgently resupply them as the need arises.

Britain’s Armed Forces have established a ‘vaccine quick reaction force’ of troops who will ensure that vaccination centres across England do not run out of available jabs. Pictured: Brigadier Phil Prosser attends a press conference on January 7

Britain’s Armed Forces have established a ‘vaccine quick reaction force’ of troops who will ensure that vaccination centres across England do not run out of available jabs. Pictured: Brigadier Phil Prosser attends a press conference on January 7

They are among 5,000 Army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy personnel deployed on Operation Rescript tackling the pandemic.

 A total of 32 military planners are embedded within the Department of Health, NHS and regional health authorities as part of the growing vaccination programme.

In Wales, 90 soldiers have been setting up vaccination centres and another 94 are driving ambulances.

The Ministry of Defence is considering whether another 1,500 personnel could be made available should the crisis continue to escalate.

BORIS: NO ONE MORE THAN 10 MILES FROM A JAB

GP HUBS TO LEAD VACCINATION DRIVE 

 Most vaccinations will be given in GP-led hubs. No10 pledges to have 1,000 open this week across England. 

GPs want all surgeries to be able to give the jab. Patients will also be vaccinated in 223 English hospitals and dozens more in the rest of the UK. 

Uptake is predicted to pass 80 per cent. Boris Johnson wants everyone to be vaccinated within ten miles of home.

...AND YOU CAN EVEN GET IT AT MORRISONS

Up to 50 Morrisons supermarket car parks could host vaccination sites. 

Jabs will be available at stores in Wakefield, West Yorkshire; Yeovil, Somerset; and Winsford, Cheshire, from tomorrow. 

The car parks of another 47 stores have also been made available. In addition, about 200 community pharmacies in England will be offering jabs this week.

MASS VACCINATION CENTRES

  1.  ExCel Centre, London
  2.  Robertson House, Stevenage
  3. Epsom Downs Racecourse, Surrey 
  4.  Ashton Gate Stadium, Bristol
  5.  Millennium Point, Birmingham
  6.  Etihad Tennis Centre, Manchester
  7.  Centre for Life, Newcastle
  8.  Elland Road Stadium, Leeds
  9.  Blackburn Cathedral
  10.  Totally Wicked Stadium, St Helens
  11.  Telford International Centre, Telford
  12.  Black Country Living Museum, Dudley
  13.  Navigation Walk, Wakefield
  14.  Jacob’s Well, Bradford
  15.  John Smith’s Stadium, Huddersfield

Red denotes centres that will open this week; black denotes centres likely to open in coming weeks.

Scotland has yet to announce the locations of any mass vaccination sites, while in Wales and Northern Ireland smaller hubs are being set up in leisure centres and other buildings.

THE THREE JABS TO SAVE UK (AND ONE MORE IN THE PIPELINE)

 Oxford-AstraZeneca

Order: 100 million doses

How effective: 62-80%

Cost per dose: £3

Storage: Fridge temperature

Where: Mass vaccination centres, hospitals and GP centres

 Pfizer-BioNTech

Order: 40 million doses

How effective: 95%

Cost per dose: £15

Storage: -70C

Where: Hospitals, GP centres and some mass vaccination centres 

Moderna *

Order: 17 million doses

How effective: 94.5%

Cost per dose: £25

Storage: -20C

Where: Hospitals, GP centres

*Available from April

Janssen: Britain has ordered up to 52 million doses of this ‘one-shot’ vaccine, and final trial data is expected within three weeks. 

The first doses, which can be stored at fridge temperature, could be given soon after.

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2021-01-10 00:22:00Z
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Priti Patel tackles the woke police chiefs who let mobs tear down statues - Daily Mail

Priti Patel tackles the woke police chiefs who let mobs tear down statues as she plans to launch a 'power grab' against 'failing' PCCs

  • The Home Secretary will this month present the recommendations of her review
  • Greater Manchester mayor accused Ms Patel of ‘playing politics with policing’
  • Mr Khan was criticised for response to the Black Lives Matter protests in London

Priti Patel is planning to launch a ‘power grab’ against woke police chiefs and ‘failing’ police and crime commissioners, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

The Home Secretary will this month present the recommendations of her review into the powers of PCCs, which will include looking at the police’s ‘operational independence’.

It is understood the plans would make it easier to sack a police chief who refuses to take action when protesters tear down statues.

Last night, Home Office sources launched attacks on Labour mayors Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham and the Bristol police force, claiming they ‘vacated the pitch’ last year.

The police force in Bristol also ¿stood by and watched¿ when Edward Colston¿s statue (pictured) was torn down, a Home Office source said

The police force in Bristol also ‘stood by and watched’ when Edward Colston’s statue (pictured) was torn down, a Home Office source said

Mr Khan was criticised for his response to the Black Lives Matter protests in London as sources claimed he ‘took a back seat’.

The police force in Bristol also ‘stood by and watched’ when Edward Colston’s statue was torn down, a Home Office source said, while Mr Burnham was criticised in his response to Greater Manchester Police’s failure to record more than 80,000 crimes in a year, which led to the resignation of its chief constable.

Last night, the Greater Manchester mayor accused Ms Patel of ‘playing politics with policing’.

The review will seek to strengthen Ms Patel¿s (pictured) powers, making them more ¿black and white¿

The review will seek to strengthen Ms Patel’s (pictured) powers, making them more ‘black and white’

The review will seek to strengthen Ms Patel’s powers, making them more ‘black and white’ amid concerns that current reporting lines are too ‘wishy washy’, a Home Office source said.

It will also propose a more ‘One Policing’ strategy instead of each force interpreting rules in its own way. The source said the move to ‘more uniform’ England and Wales-wide policing is in response to the different approaches taken to Covid rule enforcement.

They pointed out that some forces have refused to hand out many fines while at the other extreme Derbyshire Police last year dyed a lagoon to deter visitors.

Two sources said the current rules on ‘operational independence’ are not clearly defined, leaving room for interpretation.

Last night, Home Office sources launched attacks on Labour mayors Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham (pictured) and the Bristol police force, claiming they ¿vacated the pitch¿ last year

Last night, Home Office sources launched attacks on Labour mayors Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham (pictured) and the Bristol police force, claiming they ‘vacated the pitch’ last year

A consultation will look at this as well as the powers of the Home Secretary, PCCs, chief constables and Police and Crime Panels.

A newspaper report that senior officers have started calling the Home Secretary ‘Pushy Patel’ highlighted concerns that some police think she has ‘no right’ to tell them what to do, a Home Office source said, adding: ‘So we want to put in black and white where the line is.’

The source said some commissioners have become too close to the police chiefs and are ‘not holding them to account at all’.

The source added: ‘PCCs are elected to hold the police to account on behalf of the public. Some are failing in that duty.

It is understood the review will recommend changing the vote system for PCCs to first past the post. The process by which PCCs can sack police chiefs would be bolstered.

Labour MP Andrew Gwynne, who sits on the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee, said the Coalition Government was warned about some of the ‘problems’ with the police and crime commissioner system when introducing it in 2011. He added: ‘The Home Secretary has to be prepared to offer much clearer guidance from the centre, but also to accept responsibility when things go wrong.

‘I do worry it is a power grab, because different areas do have different needs, do have different problems. I’m not sure somebody sitting in Whitehall knows what’s best on the streets of Stockport.’

Mr Burnham said: ‘The Government should be honest about their own failings on policing rather than always trying to shift the blame.

‘Their cuts to police forces like GMP went way too far and damaged the quality of response to the public. They should be helping police forces recover and not playing politics with policing.’

A London Labour source said the comments about Mr Khan were ‘complete nonsense’, adding that the mayor ‘is proud of his record’.

The source added: ‘Sadiq makes absolutely no apologies for believing that Black Lives Matter.’

Paddy Tipping, of The Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, said: ‘We can all learn from experience and this is an opportunity to reflect on the role and help shape and develop it moving forward.’

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2021-01-09 22:26:00Z
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COVID-19: More fines expected for lockdown breaches as home secretary warns of tighter enforcement - Sky News

"Strong enforcement" of coronavirus restrictions is needed to control the spread of the disease, the home secretary has warned.

Priti Patel said police forces should focus their resources on people who "are clearly breaking" lockdown rules to "safeguard our country's recovery from this deadly virus".

Government sources have told Sky News this will mean that "more fines will be issued, and quicker".

Handout photo issued by 10 Downing Street of Home Secretary Priti Patel, during a media briefing in Downing Street, London, on coronavirus (COVID-19) in May.
Image: Home Secretary Priti Patel said officers would 'not hesitate' to take action where necessary

As UK coronavirus deaths surpassed 80,000 after a fourth consecutive daily increase of more than 1,000, the home secretary said: "Enforcing these rules saves lives. It is as simple as that. Officers will continue to engage with the public across the country and will not hesitate to take action when necessary."

It comes as Sky News analysis shows that people are moving about more during this lockdown than the first, suggesting people have become used to bending the rules.

Ms Patel's intervention is part of a coordinated government effort to improve public compliance and ensure further restrictions are not necessary.

It includes a major new public awareness campaign urging people to behave like they are infected with coronavirus.

More from Covid-19

Doctors have also pleaded with people to comply with the restrictions in the face of mounting pressure on hospitals, warning that staff are at their limits.

One leading medic has told Sky News the NHS was "breaking in front of us", warning that hospitals may soon be too short of staff to keep their patients safe.

Dr Zudin Puthucheary, council member of the Intensive Care Society and a critical care consultant, said that he was "scared and angry" and urged people to stay at home.

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Professor Whitty's warning in new COVID-19 ad

However, police enforcement measures during the first week of England's latest lockdown have also come under scrutiny after two women were fined £200 each for travelling separately to a Derbyshire beauty spot for a walk, about five miles from their homes.

Derbyshire Police has said it will review the fines and local MP Andrew Bridgen told Sky News: "It is important that police forces implement the rues correctly, otherwise that makes a mockery of the rules themselves."

Elsewhere, the Metropolitan Police said it had fined the owners of a London gym £1,000 for breaching lockdown rules by remaining open.

Officers were called to the fitness centre on Stean Street in Hackney to find it open, with three people inside.

Norfolk Police said it had also issued a fine - to a man and a woman who drove more than 120 miles to look at a seal colony - while North Wales Police said its officers had dealt with people breaching coronavirus rules at Moel Famau in Flintshire.

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2021-01-09 22:22:22Z
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Covid doctors in packed London hospitals ‘forced to choose who gets critical care’ as they prioritise young pe - The Sun

DOCTORS in packed London hospitals are being forced to choose who gets critical care and prioritising younger patients, according to reports.

Medics in the capital said a shortage of beds meant hospitals were implementing emergency guidelines - amid fears the NHS is reaching a point where it “simply won’t be able to cope”.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

A nurse works on a patient in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit) in St George's Hospital in Tooting, south-west London
A nurse works on a patient in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit) in St George's Hospital in Tooting, south-west LondonCredit: PA:Press Association

Doctors are reportedly “triaging” patients for critical care, with younger patients in the queue ahead of elderly patients - who are more likely to die from the virus.

Dr Katharina Hauck, from the faculty of medicine at Imperial College London, told the Daily Mail: “Hospitals in London are overwhelmed, which is a dangerous situation for all patients requiring urgent care... 

“Sadly, some hospitals are now forced to follow ... emergency triage of all patients requiring critical care.

“Applying this guidance effectively means that patients under the age of 65 who are not frail will be prioritised over elderly and frailer patients for critical care.

“Frail patients would be cared for in general wards with less intensive care.”

Hospitals in the capital have come under immense pressure as a highly contagious variant of coronavirus rips through the South East, forcing Boris Johnson to impose a third national lockdown. 

London mayor Sadiq Khan yesterday declared a major incident in the capital as cases continue to skyrocket

A major incident means services can't operate as normal and are placed in an emergency situation. However it is not clear how exactly this would impact care for non-Covid patients.

He said the NHS is "on the cusp of being overwhelmed" with more than 7,000 Covid patients in London hospitals — almost 2,000 more than the first peak last April.

The numbers of people on ventilators has almost doubled since Christmas day - with 47 per cent more patients in intensive care, the Mayor said.

It comes after staff at University College Hospital in London said they were being forced to choose between patients - with an increasing number of younger patients entering ICU with the bug.

Deputy sister at University College Hospital Ashleigh Shillingford told the BBC: "We are so stretched we have to prioritise, and prioritising care is not the NHS I grew up in. We shouldn’t have to choose what patient gets what care first."

Ambulances queue outside the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel, East London on January 5
Ambulances queue outside the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel, East London on January 5Credit: Getty Images - Getty

And there are fears that the capital may still be two weeks away from the peak - with hospitals potentially left short of 5,500 beds needed to cope with the explosion in cases. 

A leaked NHS briefing from Dr Vin Diwakar, the Regional Medical Director for the NHS in London, warned that the capital’s hospitals face a shortfall of between 1,932 and 5,422 beds by January 19. 

The briefing, seen by the Health Service Journal, says that under the “best” case scenario the capital will be short of 417 critical care beds. The “worst” case scenario could see hospitals have 945 too few beds. 

According to the HSJ, some of the plans explored in the briefing include cancelling more elective work or sending those patients to other regions or private providers.

But Dr Diwakar yesterday denied claims that patients were being “triaged” in hard-hit hospitals.

He told the Mail: “The NHS has repeatedly instructed staff that no patient who could benefit from treatment should be denied it and, thanks to this surge capacity and by hospitals working together across the capital, that has not happened.”

It comes as the UK suffered its darkest day yet in the pandemic yesterday, with a record 1,325 fatalities and 68,053 cases. 

Ministers fear that Brits are not obeying the rules in the same way as the first lockdown of March last year, which saw a high level of public compliance. 

Experts today labelled the lockdown “too lax” amid fears that the infection rate would remain high if Brits continue to flout the rules.

Susan Michie, professor of health psychology at University College London, told BBC Radio 4's Today: "It is definitely too lax, because if you think about it and compare ourselves with March, what do we have now?

"We have the winter season and the virus survives longer in the cold, plus people spend more time indoors and we know aerosol transmission, which happens indoors, is a very big source of transmission for this virus.

“And secondly we have this new variant which is 50-70% more infectious. You put those two things together, alongside the NHS being in crisis, we should have a stricter rather than less strict lockdown than we had back in March.”

Meanwhile, Boris Johnson today pleaded with Brits to stay at home, saying: “I know the last year has taken its toll — but your compliance is now more vital than ever.”

And Chris Whitty, the government’s chief medical officer, has fronted a new TV campaign warning that “if you go out people will die”. 

But in a positive step, Britain yesterday approved a third Covid vaccine in a boost to efforts to beat the pandemic.

UK regulators have now recommended the use of the Moderna jab - which is 94 per cent effective in preventing coronavirus.

UK Covid deaths pass 80,000 and cases exceed 3 MILLION as another 1,035 die and 59,937 more test positive

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2021-01-09 20:40:00Z
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