The New Zealand Herald

History-making immunisati­on campaign planned – jabs for the public by mid-year

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Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns should be available to the public by the middle of the year, according to Covid-19 Recovery Minister Chris Hipkins.

Hipkins hoped the first batches of vaccines would arrive by March, but countries being ravaged by the virus would be prioritise­d by manufactur­ers.

He said early signs from Medsafe showed no issues with the vaccines New Zealand has secured.

The Covid-19 vaccine roll-out will be the largest-mass immunisati­on campaign in New Zealand history.

The Government has secured various deals for vaccines, including for 7.6 million doses from AstraZenec­a – enough for 3.8 million people, 10.72 million doses from Novavax – enough for 5.36 million people, 750,000 courses from Pfizer/BioNTech, and 5 million from Janssen.

“We’re expecting the vaccinatio­n campaign overall to take most of the year, it’s obviously a huge undertakin­g – we’re talking about vaccinatin­g 5 million people,” Hipkins said.

“That’s never been done in New Zealand before, in the scale and in the timeframe we’re talking about.”

Border workers, health workers and high-risk communitie­s will be top priorities once the vaccine becomes available.

“We’re also expecting there will be some population groups that will be harder to reach than others, and so we’ve got plans in place and we’re putting plans in place to make sure we reach them,” he said.

However, the National Iwi Chairs Forum has put forward six recommenda­tions for the vaccine roll-out and said the Government wasn’t taking account of the risk to kauma¯tua and kuia.

Hipkins denied this and said they were aware there was an increased risk for Ma¯ori and Pacific communitie­s.

“For older New Zealanders there is an increased risk there, too. Many of our kauma¯tua will fall into both of those categories, we’re certainly very aware of that and we’re factoring that in in our planning.”

Australia’s vaccine roll-out had been pushed forward to February and there have been criticisms that the government’s plan was too slow.

However, Hipkins said we would be receiving the vaccines in a similar timeframe as Australia.

“They’re a little more optimistic on when they think the vaccines will arrive than we are. I’m being cautious and saying we know they’ll be here by the end of March.”

He said he was optimistic that there would a public roll-out by the middle of the year, but it depended on when supplies arrived in New Zealand.

“We’re expecting to see a reasonably significan­t number of vaccines, three different vaccine types arriving some time in that second quarter,” he said.

“The sooner they arrive, the sooner we can start making them available to the general public.”

 ??  ?? Covid Response Minister Chris Hipkins expects to see first vaccines arriving by the middle of March
Covid Response Minister Chris Hipkins expects to see first vaccines arriving by the middle of March

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