Townsville Bulletin

Jab target a hard ask this year, says Frewen

- COURTNEY GOULD

THE boss of the vaccine rollout says Australia is on track to reach the 70 per cent vaccinatio­n target by mid-october but stopped short of confirming the nation could hit the elusive 80 per cent threshold this year.

Covid-19 taskforce commander Lieutenant General John Frewen on Wednesday conceded it would be “hard work” to boost the jab figure from 70 to 80 per cent.

“On the current projection­s, it is possible to get to 80 per cent this year, but the vari

able here is people and people‘s preparedne­ss to get vaccinated,” General Frewen told ABC Radio.

“The numbers look encouragin­g, but … watching overseas experience, getting from 70 to 80 is hard work. So I’m not going to, you know, be sort of complacent or count those chickens just yet.”

The vaccine targets are at the heart of the government’s plan to reopen the nation. The promise of greater freedoms has been a key driver of the state and federal government­s’ pleas to get vaccinated.

General Frewen said early indicators were “very encouragin­g”, but there was still a small part of the community that would not get vaccinated.

“They’re showing that more than 80 per cent of the population tend to get vaccinated, and then there’s still another group making up their mind and a very small group who are saying they won’t get vaccinated,” he said.

It’s expected, on current projection­s, that Australia will reach the 70 per cent target in October.

Under the national plan, restrictio­ns for fully vaccinated individual­s will be eased.

The government has insisted every Australian will be offered a Covid-19 vaccine by mid-october.

It comes as the taskforce turns its attention to reducing inequality in the vaccine rollout amid criticism of the pace of the vaccinatio­ns in Indigenous communitie­s.

The government on Tuesday announced it would put aside $7.7m in funding to help boost take-up rates and address hesitancy and misinforma­tion.

General Frewen said the issue was his top priority.

“We’ve consolidat­ed this list of 30 priorities now and we’re about to go after it in a comprehens­ive way,” he told ABC Radio. “We’ve got to close that gap. We’re looking at things like additional doses, additional funding.”

 ??  ?? John Frewen.
John Frewen.

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