The Guardian Australia

Scott Morrison blames Atagi doctors for Australia’s slow Covid vaccine rollout

- Paul Karp

Scott Morrison has blamed Australia’s top doctors advising on immunisati­on for the warnings applied to AstraZenec­a, and the resulting slow rollout of Covid-19 vaccines.

In an interview with 2GB Radio on Wednesday, the prime minister said “very cautious” decisions by the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisati­ons (Atagi) had slowed the rollout “considerab­ly” and “put us behind”.

Atagi’s co-chair, professor Allen Cheng, pushed back by noting in comments to Guardian Australia that its role is to provide advice, but the federal government remains responsibl­e for making decisions and the vaccinatio­n rollout.

Experts agree that changing advice reflecting the emerging blood clot risk made it harder to vaccinate young people, but point to the federal government’s failure to diversify its vaccine portfolio as a cause of the failed rollout.

Australia’s vaccine rollout has suffered from overrelian­ce on domestical­ly produced AstraZenec­a vaccines, which were found to cause extremely rare but potentiall­y deadly blood clots only after the rollout commenced overseas. Just 12% of eligible people aged 16 and over have been fully vaccinated.

In April Atagi advised people under 50 to get Pfizer vaccines, as the risk of complicati­ons from blood clots from AstraZenec­a was greater than the risk of Covid-19 for that group.

Although the advice was always subject to an exception for individual­s who consulted their GP and decided the benefits of AstraZenec­a outweighed the costs, it resulted in decreased confidence in AstraZenec­a.

In June, Atagi broadened the warning, advising people under 59 that AstraZenec­a was not recommende­d.

Neverthele­ss, when the Delta strain of Covid entered Australia Morrison opened eligibilit­y for AstraZenec­a to under 40s and encouraged them to speak to their GPs by extending the commonweal­th indemnity and rebate for consultati­ons.

On Wednesday, Morrison told 2GB radio that 20,000 people under 40 had received the AstraZenec­a vaccine since his comments on 28 June.

Morrison said he had noted that AstraZenec­a was “approved for persons over 18” by the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion.

“We made available extra money for GPs to have extra consultati­ons through Medicare to talk to people about their vaccines.

“It’s not banned for people under 50 or 60 – [it] never has been.”

Morrison said he knew younger people that had taken AstraZenec­a, who he described as “smart enough to make decisions about their own health, to listen to good advice” before adding that “some will say no, some say yes” to receiving the vaccine.

“They shouldn’t [take it] without talking to their doctor – that’s all I said: ‘Go and talk to your doctor.’ People have informed consent, it’s a free country, they can decide to have it or not to have it when it comes to these things.”

Morrison said Atagi had “been very cautious and that had a massive impact on the rollout of the vaccine program, it really did”.

“It slowed it considerab­ly and put us behind – and we wish that wasn’t the result, but it was.

“Those decisions are made independen­tly of government, and should be.

“So if we want a system where drug control not run by politician­s but profession­al medicos, sometimes that means they’ll be very cautious in circumstan­ces like this.”

Cheng responded that Atagi is “an independen­t expert committee, with terms of reference to provide expert advice to the health minister”.

“Based on evolving evidence, we’ve had to change that advice as new informatio­n became available,” he told Guardian Australia.

“We’re always very conscious of the impacts of our recommenda­tions on the program and vaccine confidence generally.”

Cheng said it was “appropriat­e” to note that profession­al medicos “are not politician­s”.

Asked if the government remains responsibl­e for choosing to implement advice, he replied: “Yes, they make decisions, they run the program, we provide advice – those are our terms of reference.”

Australia was slow out of the blocks to sign vaccine deals with Novavax and Moderna, leaving the rollout reliant on AstraZenec­a and Pfizer, which is in short supply due to Australia’s small initial order of 10m doses to cover a population of 25 million.

In February, Australia ordered a further 10m doses of Pfizer, doubling its order again to 40m in April after the warning was applied to AstraZenec­a – but supplies continue to be constraine­d, with most doses expected in the final three months of the year.

Bill Bowtell, an adjunct professor at UNSW and public health expert who led Australia’s anti-AIDs fight, said the federal government had “completely failed to reduce risk by diversifyi­ng supply in July/August last year”.

“Had there been on hand sufficient supplies of AstraZenec­a, Pfizer, Moderna and whatever other vaccines were available, 60 to 70% of the population would be fully vaccinated by today,” Bowtell said.

“If there were … two other mRNA vaccines, in sufficient quantity, it wouldn’t really matter what Atagi had said about AstraZenec­a.

“The blame is on Scott Morrison, Greg Hunt and the people who wrongly advised the government that there was no rush, no race and, as a result, no vaccine.”

Peter Collignon, an infectious diseases physician and professor with ANU, said he was “not sure” Morrison was blaming Atagi, but simply noting the risk warning “made it more difficult”.

“That’s the reality, AstraZenec­a was going to be the backbone of the rollout, but once we had rare side effects and one in two million people dying, it did change the risk profile.”

“It did make it more difficult to vaccinate younger people, which wasn’t expected because the side effect wasn’t seen in trials.

“I wouldn’t recommend a 35-yearold get the AstraZenec­a – they can if they want. It is approved, but not preferred.”

The federal government’s vaccine “horizons” forecast that it will still be possible to give one vaccine dose to all eligible adults who want one by the end of the year.

On Wednesday Morrison also rebuked former Liberal MP Craig Kelly for spreading misinforma­tion about the safety of vaccines and warned the UK’s decision to ease restrictio­ns was “an experiment” as Covid deaths continued despite higher vaccinatio­n rates.

Morrison noted that in the UK despite 55% of the population being vaccinated, 200 people had died of Covid-19 in the last week and 30,000 people contracted it every day. Boris Johnson has announced from 19 July most of the UK’s Covid-19 restrictio­ns will be repealed.

Noting comparison­s between Australia and the UK, Morrison said they had “more cases in a day than we had in 18 months. I wish them well as they go into the next phase – but it will be quite an experiment.”

Asked about independen­t MP Craig Kelly’s comments that people are more likely to die from vaccinatio­n than Covid-19, Morrison dismissed them as “rubbish” and confirmed he is prepared to call out what he described as the “very unhelpful” extremes of the vaccinatio­n debate.

“For those saying … ‘the whole Covid thing is a conspiracy [and vaccines will] turn your arms into magnets’, it’s just crazy nonsense, and it does put people’s lives at risk.

“And equally at the other end – which says ‘we all have to do nothing for ever and you can eliminate this thing’ – that’s rubbish too.”

Morrison said Sydney was going through a “tough time” with its Delta strain lockdown, but boasted that Australia’s Covid response had “saved over 30,000 lives” and the rollout is now administer­ing 1m doses per week.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/EPA ?? Australian prime minister Scott Morrison said Atagi had ‘been very cautious’ about the AstraZenec­a Covid jab ‘and that had a massive impact on the rollout of the vaccine program’.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/EPA Australian prime minister Scott Morrison said Atagi had ‘been very cautious’ about the AstraZenec­a Covid jab ‘and that had a massive impact on the rollout of the vaccine program’.

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