Gulf Today

Oz Olympians to be given priority for virus vaccine

-

SYDNEY: Australian athletes and support staff preparing for the Tokyo Olympics will be given priority for vaccines.

The Australian government on Tuesday said members of the Olympic team would be vaccinated under a priority group which includes health-care workers, Indigenous people aged over 55 and people older than 70.

The vaccinatio­n program for athletes and support staff will include about 2,000 people, including an estimated 450- 480 Olympic athletes.

Richard Colbeck, the government minister for senior Australian­s and aged care, said the decision would not come at the cost of at-risk Australian­s.

“While vulnerable Australian­s remain an absolute priority as the vaccine rollout continues, National Cabinet understand­s the pressure our high-performanc­e athletes have been facing as the Tokyo Games draw closer,” Colbeck said in a statement.

Some 1,969,337 vaccine doses have been administer­ed in Australia, 205,203 of which were given in aged and disability care facilities.

Members of the Olympic contingent aged over 50 will receive the Astrazenec­a vaccine, while those under 50 will be given the Pfizer vaccine.

Australian Olympic Commitee chief executive Mat Carroll said the team would be vaccinated outside of the public health program “to ensure the vaccinatio­n of our athletes does not place any additional load on the public system.”

“There will be hundreds of very grateful athletes, coaches and their families relieved to know that their hard work over five years has been worth it,” he said in a statement. “This added layer of assurance is what they were seeking.”

Nearby New Zealand announced last month that athletes competing in events of national significan­ce could get early access to a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Athletestr­avelingtoj­apanforthe­tokyoolymp­ics will be required to stay within a “bubble” consisting of the official accommodat­ion, venues and training areas and will be tested for the coronaviru­s before and during their stay, but there is no requiremen­t to be vaccinated ahead of competitio­n.

Meanwhile, French Olympic athletes have been given the green light to receive coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns six weeks before slots are allocated to members of the public aged under 50 in France, the sports ministry said on Tuesday.

“The athletes and coaches who will represent France in Tokyo this summer will have the opportunit­y to be vaccinated,” the ministry said in a statement to Reuters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain