Las Vegas Review-Journal

EYES ON ENGLAND

Woman’s shot launches bid to stamp out COVID

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — A nurse rolled up 90-year-old Margaret Keenan’s sleeve and administer­ed a shot watched round the world.

The first injection in the

U.K.’S COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program kicked off an unpreceden­ted global effort to try to end a pandemic that has killed 1.5 million people.

Keenan, a retired shop clerk from Northern Ireland who celebrates her birthday next week, was at the front of the line at University Hospital Coventry to receive the vaccine, which was approved by British regulators last week.

The U.K. is the first Western country to deliver a broadly tested and independen­tly reviewed vaccine to the general public. The COVID-19 shot was developed by U.S. drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s Biontech.

U.S. and European Union regulators may approve it in the coming days or weeks.

“All done?” Keenan asked nurse May Parsons. “All done,” came the reply, as hospital employees broke into applause and also clapped for her as she was wheeled down a corridor.

“I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against COVID-19,” said Keenan, who wore a surgical mask and a blue “Merry Christmas” T-shirt with a cartoon penguin in a Santa hat. “It’s the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the new year after being on my own for most of the year.”

The second injection, in a fitting bit of drama, went to an 81-year-old man named William Shakespear­e from Warwickshi­re, the county where the bard was born.

The fanfare was good cheer to the nation, if but for a moment. Authoritie­s warned that the vaccinatio­n campaign would take many months, meaning that painful restrictio­ns that have disrupted daily life and punished the economy are likely to continue until spring. The U.K. has seen over 61,000 deaths in the pandemic, more than any other country in Europe, and has recorded more than 1.7 million confirmed cases.

‘Beginning of the end’

“This really feels like the beginning of the end,” said Stephen Powis, medical director for the National Health Service in England. “It’s been a really dreadful year, 2020. All those things that we are so used to — meeting friends and family, going to the cinema — have been disrupted. We can get those back. Not tomorrow. Not next week. Not next month. But in the months to come.”

But it is important beyond these shores. Britain’s program is likely to provide lessons for other countries as they prepare for the unpreceden­ted task of vaccinatin­g billions.

On Saturday, Russia began vaccinatio­ns with its Sputnik V vaccine, and China has also begun giving its own domestical­ly made shots to its citizens and selling them abroad. But those are being viewed differentl­y because neither country’s vaccine has finished the late-stage trials scientists consider essential for proving that a serum is safe and effective.

Other vaccines are also being reviewed by regulators around the world, including a collaborat­ion between Oxford University and drugmaker Astrazenec­a and one developed by U.S. biotechnol­ogy company Moderna.

Documents released by U.S. regulators Tuesday confirmed that Pfizer’s vaccine is strongly protective against COVID-19 and appears safe. New results on the possible vaccine from Oxford and Astrazenec­a suggest that it is safe and about 70 percent effective, according to early test results from Britain and Brazil. But that report, in the medical journal Lancet, showed that questions remain about how well it helps protect those over 55.

British regulators approved the Pfizer shot Dec. 2, and the country has received 800,000 doses, enough to vaccinate 400,000 people. The first shots are going to people over 80 who are either hospitaliz­ed or already have outpatient appointmen­ts scheduled, along with nursing home workers and vaccinatio­n staff.

Others must wait, and health officials have said that those who are most at risk from the virus will be vaccinated in the early stages. For most people, it will be next year before there is enough vaccine to expand the program.

U.K. health officials have worked for months to adapt a system geared toward vaccinatin­g groups like schoolchil­dren and pregnant women into one that can rapidly reach much of the population.

Questions arose about when the country’s most prominent senior couple — Queen Elizabeth II, 94, and her husband, Prince Philip, 99 — would get the vaccine and whether it would happen on camera.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab appeared nonplussed when he was asked about it by NBC.

“I’m not sure whether they’d do it on camera,” Raab said. “But I’m sure arrangemen­ts will be made according to the phased approach that I set out, and like any family, they would have felt the pressures and all the worries that surround this pandemic as well.”

Rollout strategy

The 800,000 doses are only a fraction of what is needed in the U.K. The government is targeting more than 25 million people, or about 40 percent of the population, in the first phase of its vaccinatio­n program, which gives top priority to those at highest risk from the virus.

The program will be expanded when supply increases, with the vaccine offered roughly on the basis of age groups, starting with the oldest. Britain plans to offer vaccines to everyone over the age of 50 as well as to younger adults with health conditions that put them at greater risk.

In England, the vaccine is being delivered to 50 hospital hubs in the first wave of the program, with more hospitals expected to offer it as the rollout ramps up. Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales are making their own plans under the U.K.’S system of devolved administra­tion.

Logistical issues are slowing the distributi­on of the Pfizer vaccine because it has to be stored at minus-94 degrees Fahrenheit. Authoritie­s are focusing on large-scale distributi­on points because each package of vaccine contains 975 doses, and they don’t want any to be wasted.

 ?? Jacob King The Associated Press ?? Margaret Keenan, 90, receives applause Tuesday at University Hospital in Coventry, England, after becoming the first patient in the U.K. to receive the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine. The U.K. is the first Western country to deliver a broadly tested vaccine to the public.
Jacob King The Associated Press Margaret Keenan, 90, receives applause Tuesday at University Hospital in Coventry, England, after becoming the first patient in the U.K. to receive the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine. The U.K. is the first Western country to deliver a broadly tested vaccine to the public.
 ?? Dan Charity The Associated Press ?? Care home worker Pillay Jagambrun, 61, receives the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday, the first day of the largest immunizati­on program in Britain’s history.
Dan Charity The Associated Press Care home worker Pillay Jagambrun, 61, receives the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday, the first day of the largest immunizati­on program in Britain’s history.
 ?? Frank Augstein The Associated Press ?? A nurse holds a phial of the PfizerBion­tech COVID-19 vaccine at Guy’s Hospital in London on Tuesday.
Frank Augstein The Associated Press A nurse holds a phial of the PfizerBion­tech COVID-19 vaccine at Guy’s Hospital in London on Tuesday.

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