The Guardian (USA)

NHS Covid vaccine booking website crashes as Moderna rollout begins

- Sarah Marsh and Frances Ryan

The NHS’s booking website allowing people aged 45 and over to schedule their coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n initially crashed, moments after it was opened.

The website appeared to go down just after slots were made available. Users were met with the message: “The NHS website is currently experienci­ng technical difficulti­es. We are working to resolve these issues. Thank you for your patience.”

Shortly after the vaccine booking site was hit by the technical issues, the vaccines minister, Nadhim Zahawi, tweeted that the problem had been “fixed”. It is understood NHS Digital was able to get the website back up and running on Tuesday morning, with all issues being resolved and people able to book appointmen­ts.

Meanwhile, England was gearing up to offer its first doses of the Moderna jab, the third Covid-19 vaccine introduced in the national deployment.

On Tuesday, the vaccinatio­n will be available at 21 sites, including the Madejski Stadium in Reading and the Sheffield Arena. It will offer an alternativ­e to the Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine for under-30s, after concerns about a possible link to very rare blood clots. The Pfizer jab has already also been available.

England follows Wales and Scotland, which began using the Moderna vaccine last week. The Vaccines Taskforce has secured 17m doses of the Moderna vaccine for the UK.

Prof Stephen Powis, the medical director of NHS England, said having the Moderna vaccine marked another milestone in the national programme.

He said more sites would offer the Moderna vaccine as supplies arrived, urging people to get vaccinated when they were invited, as it is “our hope at the end of a year like no other”.

All people aged 50 and over and those in high-risk groups in the UK have been offered a coronaviru­s vaccine

before the mid-April deadline set by the government, allowing the second phase of the deployment to younger cohorts to begin.

Boris Johnson hailed the passing of “another hugely significan­t milestone”.

However, there are fears of a slowdown in supply of vaccines and possible fall in confidence after a change in advice on who could get the Oxford/ AstraZenec­a jab.

With more than 32 million people having had a first dose and 7.6 million of those having received their second, the prime minister said “many thousands of lives” had been saved.

But there were concerns not everyone had been offered a jab they could access. Last month, the Guardian reported that a number of highrisk people had still not had their first vaccine.

People unable to leave their homes were meant to be visited by a mobile vaccinatio­n team, similar to the service offered to care home residents. But the Guardian understand­s that months on, a number of older and disabled people who are too unwell to leave their homes are still waiting, with some told to travel miles to a vaccine centre.

Public Health England released operationa­l details about the Moderna jab on Monday, including informatio­n on the dose, the interval between first and second jab, the storage temperatur­e and whether people who receive the jab would need to be monitored afterwards.

The vaccine needs to be stored at a temperatur­e of -25C to -15C and once thawed can be stored at 2C to 8C for up to 30 days. The minimum interval between first and second dose of the Moderna vaccine is 28 days. Patients who receive the Moderna jab will need to wait at the vaccinatio­n centre and be observed for a period of 15 minutes after they receive the vaccine.

On Monday evening, and earlier than expected, Johnson announced the target had been reached. The Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) – the body advising on which groups should be prioritise­d for a jab – is to publish its final advice later this week on who should be next in line.

Johnson suggested the current plan would continue, meaning people in their late 40s would be offered a vaccine next. The JCVI’s interim plan published earlier in the year said the rollout should continue down the adult age groups.

Sir Simon Stevens, the chief executive of the NHS in England, said: “Vaccinatin­g 19 out of 20 people aged 50 and over is an incredible milestone. Thanks to our NHS nurses, doctors, pharmacist­s, operationa­l managers and thousands of other staff and volunteers, the NHS Covid vaccinatio­n programme is without a doubt the most successful in our history.”

 ?? Photograph: Luca Zennaro/EPA ?? The Vaccines Taskforce has secured 17m doses of the Moderna vaccine for the UK.
Photograph: Luca Zennaro/EPA The Vaccines Taskforce has secured 17m doses of the Moderna vaccine for the UK.

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