Covid-19: UK vaccine rollout set to begin with queen in line for jab

Covid-19: UK vaccine rollout set to begin with queen in line for jab

LONDON, Dec 7 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II will receive
the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine within weeks, as the biggest immunisation programme in UK history begins next week.

The monarch, 94, and her 99-year-old husband Prince Philip are in line to
get the jab early in the rollout, which gets underway Tuesday, due to their
age and will not receive preferential treatment, several newspapers reported.

Britain’s most senior royals will “let it be known” they have been given
the inoculations “as a powerful counter to the anti-vaccination movement,”
the Sunday Times said.

The Mail on Sunday added they hope “to encourage more people to take up the vital jab”.

The queen has spent much of the pandemic in self-isolation in Windsor
because of her age, and will this year forego her traditional family
Christmas at her Sandringham estate in eastern England with other royals.

A Buckingham Palace spokeswoman declined to comment on the vaccination reports, noting “medical decisions are taken personally”.

Britain on Wednesday became the first country in the world to approve the
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, and health officials have already drawn up criteria based on age and vulnerability to decide who will receive it first.

Britain has pre-ordered 40 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in
total, and is set to receive an initial batch of 800,000 to kickstart
Tuesday’s rollout.

Elderly care home residents and their carers will be the very first in
line, followed by those aged 80 and over and frontline health and care staff.

Other elderly people and the clinically extremely vulnerable will be next,
with the rest of the population then prioritised by age.

The first doses were transported to the UK this week from a Pfizer plant in
Belgium and will begin to arrive at dozens of “hospital hubs” nationwide by
Monday.

Among those first to be inoculated will be the eldest patients already
attending hospital as an outpatient, those being discharged home and others invited in.

The effort faces significant obstacles because this vaccine must be stored
at -70 degrees Celsius (-94 degrees Fahrenheit).

However, it can be kept for up to five days at 2-8 degrees Celsius.

“Despite the huge complexities, hospitals will kickstart the first phase of
the largest-scale vaccination campaign in our country’s history from
Tuesday,” Stephen Powis, national medical director of the state-run National Health Service (NHS), said.

“Hardworking staff will once again rise to the challenge to protect the
most vulnerable people from this awful disease,” he added, noting the NHS had “a strong record” in vaccine delivery.

Meanwhile, plans are reportedly being stepped up to ensure any
complications arising from the end of the Brexit transition period on
Dec 31 do not hit the rollout.

The Observer said ministers have drawn up contingency plans to fly millions of doses into Britain on military aircraft in the event of Brexit-related disruption at UK ports.

“We will do this if necessary,” a health department spokesperson told the
newspaper. — NNN-AGENCIES

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