The New Zealand Herald

Time to speed up rollout of vaccines

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New Zealand has slipped back to a more normal “normality” under the pandemic, with a collective exhale of relief. There was one border-related case yesterday, after days of no community cases. The earthquake swarm had a side effect of reminding us that co-operation helps us get through.

There’s little doubt that last week’s lockdown involved an extra level of “we’re over it” frustratio­n.

New Zealand is not alone in that, and we’ve had it a lot easier than other countries. Much of the world is in a zone of people waiting for vaccines, while feeling increasing­ly fed up with disruption.

Vaccines are not the only measure that will subdue Covid-19 but real-world data is confirming previous trial results to show that the top shots are proving effective. Still, it will take time for enough people to be vaccinated for jabs to have a marked impact on coronaviru­s spread.

The past week was messy for the Government and health authoritie­s. They faced vocal criticism. People know the threat of future outbreaks remains.

A speeded-up vaccine rollout would reassure people that progress is being made towards protection. That may not be practical because of vaccine supplies and logistics. New Zealand and Australia have been reliant on overseas firms and countries.

Until the rollout reaches most Kiwis and there’s visible signs of the operation generally, there isn’t going to be an easing of background apprehensi­on in the community.

The decision to vaccinate frontline workers and their families first was the right call. It is clearly the quickest way to at least achieve improved protection for the country.

But the stated aim for general vaccinatio­ns to start in the second half of the year now seems too leisurely from a pragmatic and political standpoint.

Auckland could suffer further MIQ breaches before then. Because the city is bearing the brunt and is important for the economy, it needs a good share of the early vaccine batches.

Ironically, the United States and Britain — which had major pandemic health disasters — are showing how to handle the vaccine rollout, doing the best of countries with large population­s. What’s required from authoritie­s is urgency and resourcefu­lness, vaccine promotion, and both mass vaccinatio­n sites and small, localised distributi­on.

Britain got off to a flying start, approving vaccines early, and creating unity around the operation. The US has given jabs to more than 85 million people, has set up massive dose sites in stadiums, made use of federal workers and national guard troops, and is getting two rival pharma companies to work together to increase supplies of a one-shot vaccine.

Of course they needed a big effort after high death and case counts.

New Zealand’s pandemic response last year was world leading. Yet we barely register on the list of more than 100 countries that collective­ly have administer­ed at least 292 million doses. From going hard and early on the virus, we are running a bit slow and late on vaccinatio­ns.

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