Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Vaccine anger!

UK’S decision to focus on age, not occupation enrages police, teachers

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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — Britain’s next phase of novel coronaviru­s vaccines will be administer­ed based on age rather than occupation­al risk, an advisory group said yesterday, sparking anger from police and teachers who said they should get priority.

Speaking at a televised press conference yesterday, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Britain’s Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) had opted to offer the jab based on age “in order to save most lives”.

“This is the fastest and simplest way to roll out the jab. Our moral duty is to put saving lives first, and that’s what we’ve done,” he said.

Britain has vaccinated 19 million people, 35 per cent of all adults, with at least one dose and says it plans to finish the whole population by the end of July.

It is aiming to give a first dose to people over 50 and vulnerable groups by mid-april, before moving onto those in their 40s, followed by those in their 30s and the other over-18s, the JCVI announced earlier yesterday.

Professor Wei Shen Lim, a member of the committee, said it would be speedier to move through groups by age, rather than occupation­al risk.

“Following an age-based programme will be simple, and simplicity has been one of the cornerston­es of the current programme in terms of speed and success,” he said.

“Speed is the critical factor here.”

But the decision was lambasted by police, who called it a “contemptib­le betrayal of police officers”.

“Their anger is palpable, this will not be forgotten,” tweeted John Apter, the national chairman of the Police Federation of England and Wales, which represents front line officers.

Teachers were similarly upset.

The general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, Geoff Barton, said he was “disappoint­ed that the JCVI had not advised the prioritisa­tion of education staff”.

Schools are set to reopen in England on March 8, prompting fears of increased transmissi­on risks.

The Government’s Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-tam said those working in factories, in the hospitalit­y sector or driving taxis were more at risk from COVID-19 than teachers, and “because of the multiplici­ty of occupation­s that would need to be called forward”, basing inoculatio­n on where individual­s worked would “damage the pace of the vaccine roll-out”.

“It’s more important to be in the queue and worry less about exactly where you are in the queue,” Van Tam said. “Making that queue move really fast is the key,” he added.

The JCVI has said the next phase of inoculatio­ns would focus on boosting take-up among black, Asian and other ethnic minority communitie­s within eligible age bands, as well as those who are obese and those living in deprived neighbourh­oods.

Britain this week downgraded its coronaviru­s alert to four from the highest tier, as the country looks to peel back restrictio­ns in the coming months.

 ?? (Photos: AFP) ?? NOTTINGHAM, England Nurse Maggie Clark administer­s a dose of the Astrazenec­a/oxford COVID-19 vaccine to a patient at a vaccinatio­n centre set up at Fiveways Islamic Centre and Mosque in Nottingham, central England, on February 22, 2021.
(Photos: AFP) NOTTINGHAM, England Nurse Maggie Clark administer­s a dose of the Astrazenec­a/oxford COVID-19 vaccine to a patient at a vaccinatio­n centre set up at Fiveways Islamic Centre and Mosque in Nottingham, central England, on February 22, 2021.
 ??  ?? LONDON, England — Britain’s new Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England Jonathan Van-tam addressing a virtual press conference inside 10 Downing Street in central London yesterday to give an update on the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. Britain’s next phase of COVID-19 vaccines will be administer­ed based on age rather than occupation­al risk, an advisory group said yesterday, sparking anger from police and teachers who said they should get priority.
LONDON, England — Britain’s new Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England Jonathan Van-tam addressing a virtual press conference inside 10 Downing Street in central London yesterday to give an update on the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. Britain’s next phase of COVID-19 vaccines will be administer­ed based on age rather than occupation­al risk, an advisory group said yesterday, sparking anger from police and teachers who said they should get priority.

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