Daily Express

CORRECTION­S AND COMPLAINTS

- By Hanna Geissler Health Reporter

If we’ve published anything factually inaccurate, please contact the readers’ editor by email at expresslet­ters @express.co.uk or write to Readers’ Editor, Daily Express at One Canada Square, London E14 5AP and, once verified, we’ll correct it as soon as possible. The Daily Express and Sunday Express are published by Express Newspapers, a subsidiary company of Reach PLC, which is a member of IPSO, the Independen­t Press Standards Organisati­on. We adhere to the Editors’ Code Of Practice as enforced by IPSO, which is contactabl­e for advice at IPSO Gate House, 1 Farringdon Street, EC4M 7LG. Website www.ipso.co.uk Telephone: 0300123 2220, email advice@ipso.co.uk. If you have a complaint concerning a potential breach of the Code of Practice, we will deal with your complaint directly or IPSO can refer your complaint to us. Please go to www.reachplc.com/how-to-complain where you can view our Complaints Policy and Procedure. A How To Complain pack is also available by writing to the Legal and Compliance Department, Reach PLC, One Canada Square, London E14 5AP. DELAYS to delivery of the winter flu jab will put thousands of people “at risk”, say health experts.

Pregnant women and the vulnerable are due to begin receiving the vaccine within days.

But French company Sanofi Pasteur, one of the NHS’s main suppliers, has written to GP practices saying some batches of the vaccine will be delayed.

The firm supplies around a third of the three million jabs administer­ed by GPs each year.

The letter said 60 per cent of surgeries will receive the first of three deliveries as planned in the week beginning October 7. But a quarter will not receive the vaccine until a week later and a further 15 per cent will have to wait two weeks.

Dr Nick Scriven, president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said any delay in delivery of the flu vaccine was “a risk”.

“This year the risk could be much higher if the pattern of an early peak in influenza follows the recent Australian season – the window to vaccinate will be very, very small,” he said.

“Even if we see a ‘normal’ time frame, the time to get effective vaccinatio­n is hampered by this second delay.”

Dr Scriven was referring to the World Health Organisati­on, which took

Prof Stokes-Lampard is concerned at delay longer than scheduled deciding which strains of flu to target.

The letter also said deliveries of a second batch of vaccines due to arrive on October 21 will be delayed.

Some 62 per cent will be one week late and 38 per cent delayed by a fortnight. GP practices purchase the flu vaccine directly from suppliers and are then repaid by the NHS for immunising patients. Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, chair of the Royal College of GPs, “concerning”.

“Ensuring that as many of our at-risk patients as possible get their flu jabs is a priority,” she said. “It is something we plan for meticulous­ly and work incredibly hard to deliver every year, so any delay is concerning.”

She urged patients not to deterred from booking their jab.

Sanofi Pasteur distribute­s around 200 million doses of flu vaccines globally each year, 40 per cent of the total.

Flu kills around 8,000 people in England each year, 6,000 of whom have a serious problem with their heart or lungs. said the delay was be

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? Those with lung or heart complaints are particular­ly vulnerable to the flu
Picture: GETTY Those with lung or heart complaints are particular­ly vulnerable to the flu
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