Whanganui Chronicle

When Whanganui will get the Covid-19 vaccine

The rollout to border staff around Whanganui is likely to begin next week

-

Rollout of the Covid-19 vaccine will begin in the Whanganui, Rangitikei and south Ruapehu districts in the next week or so. The Whanganui District Health Board said that a planning and implementa­tion group representi­ng Whanganui Regional Health Network, Whanganui District Health Board, Hauora a Iwi (the DHB’s iwi partnershi­p body), the National Hauora Coalition and Maori health service providers had been formed and was working on finalising arrangemen­ts.

“It will have responsibi­lity for delivering the Pfizer vaccine to almost 55,000 people in the Whanganui district, Rangitikei and south Ruapehu,” the DHB said.

“The rollout will start around the end of March when members of the vaccinatio­n team will be vaccinated along with family members of border and MIQ/MIF workforce living in our district.”

There was currently a recruitmen­t drive for additional staff, with a focus on trained staff who may have left the health system in the past few years.

The rollout would then follow the Government’s tiered structure, with frontline healthcare workers and critical workforces (such as police, fire and ambulance), aged residentia­l care workers and residents, and atrisk people in the community, those with underlying health conditions and those over 65 years first to be eligible to get the vaccine.

The vaccinatio­n of the bulk of the population was expected in the second half of 2021.

The Covid-19 vaccine is free and is being made available for everyone in New Zealand aged 16 years and over.

“It is safe and effective and while it is not compulsory for people to be vaccinated, it is strongly encouraged,” the DHB said.

“It is acknowledg­ed that rural and remote areas of the region will need a specific focus, and discussion­s are taking place on how to reach outlying areas.

“The governance group is working to ensure easy access for all, with an emphasis on the most vulnerable in our community, and on Maori and Pacific population­s which are most at risk from the virus.

“The Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme is the largest and most intensive vaccinatio­n programme undertaken in the Whanganui region, and there will be a strong focus on protecting Maori whanau, with iwi providers playing an important role.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo / NZDF ?? Ministry of Defence personnel working on the border were among the first priority workers in New Zealand to receive the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.
Photo / NZDF Ministry of Defence personnel working on the border were among the first priority workers in New Zealand to receive the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand