Marin Independent Journal

British vaccine program expands amid rising toll

- By Jill Lawless

Health officials aim to give 15 million people, including everyone over 70, an initial shot by Feb. 15.

LONDON » Britain is expanding a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n program that has seen more than 6 million people get the first of two doses — even as the country’s death toll in the pandemic approaches 100,000.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Sunday that three-quarters of the U.K.’s over-80s have received a vaccine shot. He said threequart­ers of nursing home residents have also had their first jab.

Health authoritie­s said 6.35 million doses of vaccine have been administer­ed since injections began last month, including almost 500,000 doses on Saturday, the highest oneday total so far. Health officials aim to give 15 million people, including everyone over 70, a first vaccine shot by Feb. 15, and cover the entire adult population by September.

Britain is inoculatin­g people with two vaccines — one made by U.S. pharma firm

Pfizer and German company BioNTech, the other by U.K.Swedish drugmaker AstraZenec­a and Oxford University. It has also authorized a third, developed by Moderna.

It is giving the shots at doctors’ offices, hospitals, pharmacies and vaccinatio­n centers set up in conference halls, sports stadiums and other large venues like Salisbury Cathedral. Thirty more locations are opening this week, including a former IKEA store and a museum of industrial history that was used as a set for the TV show “Peaky Blinders.”

Britain’s vaccinatio­n campaign is a rare success in a country with Europe’s worst confirmed coronaviru­s outbreak. The U.K. has recorded 97,939 deaths among people who tested positive, including 610 new deaths reported Sunday.

The U.K. is set within days to become the fifth country in the world to record 100,000 COVID-19 deaths, after the United States, Brazil, India and

Mexico — all of which have much larger population­s than Britain’s 67 million people.

Some health experts have questioned the Conservati­ve government’s decision to give the two vaccine doses up to 12 weeks

apart, rather than the recommende­d three weeks, in order to offer as many people as possible their first dose quickly.

AstraZenec­a has said it believes a first dose of its vaccine offers protection after 12 weeks but Pfizer says

it has not tested the efficacy of its jab after such a long gap.

The British Medical Associatio­n says the government should “urgently review” the policy.

But Anthony Harnden, deputy head of the government-advising Joint Committee on Immunizati­on and Vaccinatio­n, defended the policy, saying the U.K. is in a “dire situation.”

“Every dose of vaccine we give as a second dose, we’ll be denying somebody their first dose at the moment and denying them very good protection,” Harnden told Sky News. He said the policy of prioritizi­ng first doses would “save thousands and thousands of lives.”

Britain’s latest surge is being fueled in part by a new virus variant first identified in southeast England, which scientists believe is more transmissi­ble than the original strain. They also say it may be more lethal, though that evidence is weaker.

The British government has said it may tighten quarantine requiremen­ts for people arriving from abroad in an attempt to keep out other new variants discovered in South Africa and Brazil. Already travelers to Britain must self-isolate for 10 days, but enforcemen­t is patchy.

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 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Claire Chatt prepares the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine inside Salisbury Cathedral in Salisbury, England, on Wednesday.
FRANK AUGSTEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Claire Chatt prepares the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine inside Salisbury Cathedral in Salisbury, England, on Wednesday.

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