The Northern Advocate

First phase of vaccine rollout nears completion

40,000 tests for Covid performed; another dose soon for those already vaccinated

- Karina Cooper

More than 20 per cent of Northland’s population have been tested since the Covid-19 pandemic hit in March last year. And almost a year later the fight against the virus is well under way in the region as the first rollout of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine focused on protecting Northland borders nears completion.

Dr Bart Willems, Nga¯ Tai Ora — Public Health Northland public health medicine specialist, said 40,279 Covid-19 tests have been completed in Northland since testing first began in March 2020.

Around 8160 of those tests were performed after January 24 this year. That was the date the region was flung into high alert as the news broke that the country’s first reported community case since November had landed in our backyard.

A 56-year-old woman, who lived south of Whanga¯rei, tested positive for the virus after leaving managed isolation.

She had visited 30 southern Northland locations, including cafes, restaurant­s, retail outlets, tourist attraction­s and Mangawhai. But with no further community cases reported in the region since then, the Northland District Health Board has been full steam ahead with the Covid-19 immunisati­on programme.

Willems said a mix of around 300 border workers — mostly from Northport and O¯ pua Wharf — and authorised vaccinator­s had received their jabs as of 8am on March 15. They were now receiving their second and final dose after a three-week stand down between shots.

A national total of 12,709 of the 15,200-strong workforce in MIQ facilities and at the border have so far received the vaccine with 21 frontline workers outside of Northland having declined the Covid-19 jab.

Willems reported the NDHB, Public Health Northland, and the Ministry of Health had so far fulfilled a national aim to avoid wasting any doses of the vaccine. “A vaccine would be wasted if it couldn’t be used within the timeframe required,” he said.

“We have not had any wastage thus far and are committed to not having any vaccine wasted.”

Currently the vaccine is defrosted in Auckland then transporte­d to Northland via a cold chain network which is a temperatur­e-controlled supply chain.

Nine large freezers that can be dialled down to -80C are the central storage facility for the Pfizer/ BioNTech vaccine that requires ultralow temperatur­es. Vial vaccines have five days, from defrost day, in a fridge before they expire, Willems said.

To avoid wastage the NDHB has a standby list of people who could be individual­ly invited to fill any remaining vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts at short notice.

Northland District Health Board communicat­ions manager Liz Inch said the list contained border workers and household contacts but they had started a standby list of frontline healthcare workers.

 ?? Photo / Tania Whyte ?? Patricia Dargaville takes a forehead temperatur­e reading at Rawene’s Covid19 testing station in August last year.
Photo / Tania Whyte Patricia Dargaville takes a forehead temperatur­e reading at Rawene’s Covid19 testing station in August last year.

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