The Jerusalem Post

Finnish nurse squeezes extra vaccine doses with air-bubble technique

- • By ESSI LEHTO

HELSINKI (Reuters) – Finnish nurse Sari Roos is teaching her colleagues a vaccinatio­n technique that enables her to squeeze more doses out of COVID-19 vaccine vials, helping to stretch scarce supplies and ensure more people can be inoculated.

Her air-bubble trick makes it possible to extract an elusive seventh dose from vials of the vaccine from Pfizer – one more than the six approved by Europe’s health regulator that can normally only be drawn with a special needle and syringe.

Such “low-dead-space” shot utensils are in short supply, making Roos’s trick all the more valuable as countries seek to protect people against new, more infectious coronaviru­s strains that are spreading a third wave of infection.

Roos’s technique, similar to one used in Denmark, begins by drawing some vaccine liquid and then pushing it back into the bottle to get rid of air in the syringe. She then draws the exact dose and completes it with sterile air from the bottle.

The dose is then injected with minimal waste.

“The purpose of the air is to push all the liquid into the patient from the needle and close the injection channel so it won’t bleed,” Roos told Reuters at Helsinki’s Laakso Hospital, where she works as a training nurse.

Her success has drawn the attention of colleagues at home and abroad who are keen to get more shots from each vial.

Tuija Kumpulaine­n, head of the Finnish Health Ministry Health and Safety Unit, says drawing extra doses is safe when performed with precision.

“Skilled experts can get more doses, but even they have to make sure no liquid is left in the equipment, meaning the dose would be too small,” Kumpulaine­n told Reuters.

While the technique is not easy and doesn’t work every time, it also makes it possible to draw 12 doses from the 10-dose vials from AstraZenec­a and Moderna – the other two vaccines approved for use in the European Union.

“The number of extra doses is significan­t,” says Jutta Peltoniemi, an infectious diseases doctor in the city of Turku in southwest Finland.

“Imagine that you were among the extra people we vaccinated today in Helsinki. Who, without this technique, would have had to wait? These extra doses do save lives,” Roos says.

 ?? (Essi Lehto/Reuters) ?? TRAINING NURSE Sari Roos prepares a dose of AstraZenec­a vaccine in Laakso hospital in Helsinki, last month.
(Essi Lehto/Reuters) TRAINING NURSE Sari Roos prepares a dose of AstraZenec­a vaccine in Laakso hospital in Helsinki, last month.

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