The Bakersfield Californian

‘V-Day’ arrives in UK as it starts 1st shots

- BY DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — It’s been dubbed “V-Day” in Britain — recalling the D-Day landings in France that marked the start of the final push in World War II to defeat Nazi Germany.

A week after the U.K. became the first Western country to authorize widespread use of a vaccine against COVID-19, it will administer its first shots today in its war on the virus.

Those 800,000 doses will first go to people over 80 who are either hospitaliz­ed or already have outpatient appointmen­ts scheduled, along with nursing home workers.

In other words, the National Health Service is saying to the waiting public, in effect: Don’t call us, we’ll call you. Only those who have been contacted by the NHS to arrange an appointmen­t will be getting the jab.

Most people will have to wait until next year before there is enough vaccine on hand to expand the program.

“I don’t think people should expect anything over the next few days because the reality is … that for the vast, vast, vast majority of people this will be done in January, February, March,” said Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers. “And the one thing that we don’t want people to get anxious about or concerned about is ‘Where’s my letter?’ in December.”

Public health officials around the globe are watching Britain’s rollout as they prepare for the unpreceden­ted task of rapidly vaccinatin­g billions of people to end the pandemic that has killed more than 1.5 million worldwide. While the U.K. has a well-developed infrastruc­ture for delivering vaccines, it is geared to vaccinatin­g groups such as school children or pregnant women, not the entire population.

The U.K. is getting a head start on the project after British regulators on Dec. 2 gave emergency authorizat­ion to the vaccine produced by U.S. drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech. U.S. and European Union authoritie­s

are also reviewing the vaccine, alongside rival products developed by U.S. biotechnol­ogy company Moderna, and a collaborat­ion between Oxford University and drugmaker AstraZenec­a.

On Saturday, Russia began vaccinatin­g thousands of doctors, teachers and others at dozens of centers in Moscow with its Sputnik V vaccine. That program is being viewed differentl­y because Russia authorized use of Sputnik V last summer after it was tested in only a few dozen people.

But the vaccine can’t arrive soon enough for the U.K., which has more than 61,000 COVID-19 related deaths — more than any other country has reported in Europe.

 ?? YUI MOK / POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Nurses at the Royal Free Hospital, London, simulate the administra­tion of the Pfizer vaccine to support staff training Friday ahead of the rollout this week.
YUI MOK / POOL PHOTO VIA AP Nurses at the Royal Free Hospital, London, simulate the administra­tion of the Pfizer vaccine to support staff training Friday ahead of the rollout this week.

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