Otago Daily Times

Vaccine supplies run short

- EMMA PERRY and RICHARD DAVISON

THE Southern supply of flu vaccines is under strain, and in some cases medical centres are unable to meet demand as private providers stockpilin­g vaccines have been ordered to redistribu­te them so people at risk of serious illness can be vaccinated.

Around the Southern region, general practices are reporting limited quantities of the vaccine and different ways of prioritisi­ng distributi­on, while other practices are only just managing with the supply they have.

The Otago Daily Times has received several reports from Dunedin residents over 65 who have rung medical centres to request a flu vaccinatio­n, but told it would not be possible.

The Ministry of Health brought flu vaccine availabili­ty forward to March 18 for highrisk groups and frontline health workers, in the hope of reducing the burden on the healthcare system during the Covid19 crisis.

Since then, GPs around the country have been reporting shortages.

When contacted, medical centres around Otago and Southland also reported shortages of the vaccine.

GP clinics in Te Anau, Wanaka, Invercargi­ll and Ranfurly all said they had limited supplies of the vaccine and high demand for it.

Ranfurly Medical Centre GP Dr Verne Smith said the practice had a ‘‘terrible backlog’’ of demand.

‘‘We got some in at the end of last week, and that was virtually all gone in a day.’’

He said the practice was not prioritisi­ng the elderly while supplies were ‘‘extremely limited’’.

‘‘As our older and more vulnerable patients are already selfisolat­ing and less likely to contract the flu, instead we’ve been prioritisi­ng our frontline workers, such as emergency services and supermarke­t employees.’’

In Te Anau, Fiordland Medical Practice manager Wendy den Hertog said the surgery had ‘‘far less’’ than it ordered and that meant it was ‘‘really restrictin­g who we administer it to’’.

A Dunedin medical centre manager, who did not wish to be named, said the medical facility had temporaril­y run out of the vaccine and had been advised the next shipment of the vaccine would not come until after Easter, which meant more than a week of having to turn away those wanting the vaccine.

“It’s not ideal at all.”

Other medical centres in the city reported similar situations, though one medical centre manager said it was the same situation they normally faced each year when the first doses of the vaccine were made available.

The New Zealand Herald last night reported the holders of 500,000 missing doses (sitting on shelves in the fridges of wholesaler­s, travel and occupation­al health providers who had ordered large quantities before the vaccine became available on the private market) had been instructed to redistribu­te the vaccines.

When a vaccine was administer­ed it was registered with the Immunisati­on Advisory Centre, so the Ministry of Health knew the doses were somewhere, directorge­neral of Health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield said yesterday.

‘‘We’re playing an active role in ensuring they’re redistribu­ted around the country,’’ he said.

— Additional reporting, The New Zealand Herald

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