Burton Mail

Most care home jabs ‘by end of week’

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THE majority of care home residents in England are expected to have been vaccinated against Covid-19 by the end of the week, health officials have said.

NHS England has told GPS it “expects” care home residents and staff at homes across England to be vaccinated by the end of this week, or by January 24 “at the latest”.

A letter sent to the groups of GP surgeries who have signed up to deliver the vaccinatio­n programme suggests GPS can do this from 8am to 8pm seven days a week.

It comes as MPS heard that vaccinatin­g just 25 care home residents against Covid-19 could save a life, MPS have heard.

The figures demonstrat­e some of the reasoning behind the priority list set out by experts advising the Government. Care home residents top the list which sets out nine categories of those most at risk. The next category include over80s and all frontline health and care workers. Vaccinatin­g 250 people over the age of 80 will save one life, the Science and Technology Committee was told.

But “many thousands” of train operators would need to be vaccinated to save a life, MPS heard. The Government aims to have the top four priority groups – including care home residents and their carers, frontline health and social care staff and all those over the age of 70 – offered their first jab by mid-february. Professor Wei Shen Lim, chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI), told the committee: “In terms of protecting people within a constraine­d vaccine supply, the estimates are that we have to vaccinate only about 250 people aged over 80 to save one life.

“For care home residents, we only need to vaccinate somewhere between 25 to 45 care home residents to save one life.

“If you were trying to vaccinate, for example, train operators, then you would have to vaccinate many thousand train operators to save a life. It doesn’t mean that that’s not important, but it’s weighing up the values there. That’s a policy decision as to what value one wants to weigh up.”

Vaccine deployment minister Nadhim Zahawi said it was his “instinct” that frontline key workers would be next in line for the vaccine after the most at-risk were immunised but said the Government would be guided by the JCVI.

“The reason the JCVI have given us the priority list, the nine categories, is because actually the thing you want to do is to cut mortality – people dying from the virus,” he told the committee.

“The JCVI are best-placed to look at this in terms of looking at where do we go next. Now, my instinct is to say, rightly so that those who are most likely to come into contact with a viral load – teachers, shop workers, policemen and women would be the highest risk of getting the virus, and therefore they’re the ones we should focus on, but I would very much be guided by the JCVI.”

Dr Mary Ramsay, head of immunisati­on at Public Health England, said in order to keep services running it would be a “societal decision” on which key workers are next prioritise­d for a vaccine.

 ??  ?? Nadhim Zahawi
Nadhim Zahawi

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