Hull Daily Mail

‘All adults will get jab by September’

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EVERY adult in the UK will be offered a first dose of a coronaviru­s vaccine by September, Dominic Raab has pledged.

The Foreign Secretary said it would be “great” if the rollout could be faster but that the Government was working to the early autumn target.

He told Sky’s Sophy Ridge on Sunday: “Our target is by September to have offered all the adult population a first dose. If we can do it faster than that, great, but that’s the roadmap.”

Mr Raab’s pledge came amid dire warnings about the “extreme pressure” on the NHS – as it was revealed a coronaviru­s patient is admitted to hospital “every 30 seconds”.

NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens said: “Since Christmas Day we’ve seen another 15,000 increase in the inpatients in hospitals across England, that’s the equivalent of filling 30 hospitals full of coronaviru­s patients.

“Staggering­ly, every 30 seconds across England another patient is being admitted to hospital with coronaviru­s.”

However, Sir Simon said the NHS in England is vaccinatin­g at a rate of “140 jabs a minute” and will start testing 24/7 vaccinatio­ns in some hospitals in the next 10 days.

More than 3.5 million people in the UK have now received their first dose of a vaccine and some 324,000 doses of coronaviru­s vaccines were administer­ed in the space of 24 hours.

Mr Raab said the Government hoped that 88% of those most at risk of dying from coronaviru­s would receive their first jab by the middle of February – with 99% by the early spring.

After then, he suggested, lockdown restrictio­ns could be gradually eased – with a possible return to the tiered system.

“I think it is fair to say it won’t be a big bang, if you like, it will be done phased, possibly back through the tiered approach that we had before,” he told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show.

When pressed on whether there would be enough vaccine supply for someone to get their second dose within 12 weeks, he said “we ought to” be able to deliver.

Leading epidemiolo­gist Professor Azra Ghani said a combinatio­n of low case numbers and having vaccinated the most vulnerable would be needed before restrictio­ns could be eased.

She told Sky: “Really, we want to get back to the situation we were in the summer with relatively low case numbers compared to now, so that we can actually test and trace and reduce onward infections.

“At the same time we’re, of course, rolling out a vaccine, that’s something we haven’t had up until now and that vaccine rollout is going very well.

“That will hopefully protect those that are most vulnerable to the severe consequenc­es of this disease.

“We’ll need to get a balance of these two things in place before we can start to lift restrictio­ns and it’s very difficult to say exactly when that will be.”

 ??  ?? Dominic Raab
Dominic Raab

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