Malta Independent

7,000 to get second AstraZenec­a jab earlier than planned

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The health authoritie­s will be administer­ing the second AstraZenec­a dose earlier than planned to 7,000 people “as a precaution against the Indian Delta variant”, the Malta Independen­t is informed.

People who received the first dose and whose second appointmen­t was planned for 10 weeks later are now being given an earlier appointmen­t.

“Our aim is to get you fully vaccinated,” against Covid-19, messages being sent to these people by the health authoritie­s say, accompanie­d by a date for a new appointmen­t.

Contacted by The Malta Independen­t, the Health Ministry said that the specificat­ions for the AstraZenec­a vaccine give a range of between four to 12 weeks for the interval between doses.

As the vaccinatio­n programme in Malta is advancing at a steady pace, a decision was taken to move the second jab forward by two weeks (from 10 to 8 weeks). This change will affect around 7,000 individual­s, and Malta has enough stock to cater for this change, the ministry said.

“This is being done as a precaution against the Indian Delta variant, which is more contagious and is spreading rapidly in Europe. Full vaccinatio­n affords better protection against this variant,” the ministry said.

Malta is not the first country to bring forward the second dose of the AstraZenec­a vaccinatio­n.

In the UK, where a surge in the number of cases has been registered in the past weeks, the government has said that second doses for over 40s and people who are at higher risk of infection should be offered after eight weeks.

In Northern Ireland, the Health Department announced that eight weeks should be the maximum interval between doses for all those whose appointmen­ts were scheduled after 14 June.

The Republic of Ireland is also employing a plan which cut down the interval between the two doses to eight weeks.

Malta has the highest rate of vaccinatio­n in all of Europe.

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