Otago Daily Times

Plans in place to begin vaccinatio­ns

- NICHOLAS JONES

AUCKLAND: New Zealand’s first Covid19 vaccinatio­ns will be given at the workplaces of border staff and some glitches are expected when a new database is used to track who has been inoculated.

The largest vaccinatio­n campaign in New Zealand’s history begins on Saturday, when frontline workers in Auckland will start being vaccinated.

Details of vaccinatio­ns — and when the crucial followup dose is due — will be stored in a new database, the Covid Immunisati­on Register, which will eventually be expanded to cover all immunisati­ons and replace a badly outdated system.

The change will mean inevitable glitches, but they should not be blown out of proportion, said Dr Nikki Turner, director of the Immunisati­on Advisory Centre, which is providing coordinati­on and training for the vaccine campaign.

‘‘There will be glitches along the way, but I think the key building blocks are there. When you do programmes like this, things are not always smooth right at the start.’’

A bigger challenge is ensuring the frontline workers who will be vaccinated in the first phase — cleaners, nurses, security staff, Customs and border officials, airline staff and hotel workers — have enough understand­ing to give informed consent.

‘‘There are always people who are anxious about new vaccines, so being able to offer effective communicat­ion in all the ways we can is the hardest challenge for us.’’

Dr Turner said people could be reassured by the evidence behind the ‘‘extremely impressive’’ Pfizer vaccine, which now not only included clinical trials but safety data from more than 12 million doses given in the United States, and in other countries.

About 60,000 doses of the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine arrived in the country on Monday morning, enough to cover about 30,000 people, given the vaccine needs two doses, given about three weeks apart.

The vaccines must be stored at ultralow temperatur­es, and will be kept in nine 80degC freezers that can store more than 1.5 million doses in total.

Those will be in Auckland and Christchur­ch.

However, because the vaccines can be stored for up to five days in normal cold chain fridges at temperatur­es from 2degC to 8degC, and up to two hours at room temperatur­e prior to use, they will be administer­ed across the country, in areas with borders or MIQ facilities.

An inventory management system has been set up to track where vaccines are, their temperatur­e and expiry dates.

A nationwide ‘‘dry run’’ was held last week to test systems ahead of vaccinatio­ns starting on Saturday, in the Auckland region initially.

Officials have also kept a close watch on strengths and weaknesses in systems used overseas, including in the United Kingdom, which has now delivered 15 million vaccines.

‘‘Obviously, we don’t want leftover vaccine. So it’s trying to match the numbers to your vaccine supplies, within a fiveday window,’’ Dr Turner said.

It will take several weeks to vaccinate border workers, vaccinatio­ns mostly taking place in their usual workplace such as MIQ facilities.

The next phase will cover the people they live with, and from then on people will probably be asked to come to specific sites or clinics, set up by each DHB.

The general population will likely be offered vaccinatio­n in the second half of the year, and that will need an extra 2000 to 3000 vaccinator­s, to be drawn from retired or nonpractis­ing nurses, doctors or pharmacist­s and finalyear medical students, with training and oversight.

However, for now, the 2200 trained vaccinator­s are enough. The Immunisati­on Advisory Centre has provided specific training concerning the Pfizer vaccine, including an online twohour tutorial.

Medsafe guidance runs through processes including diluting the vaccine to ensure six doses can be taken from one vial, and ‘‘gently inverting’’ thawed vials 10 times prior to dilution, making sure to never shake, and watching for particulat­es or discoloura­tion.

Nurses Society of New Zealand director David Wills said he expected 100% of his members to accept vaccinatio­n, as would their family members.

‘‘Everyone is looking forward to it. Nurses are well sold on the value of vaccinatio­n, and noone has ever expressed any concerns about safety.’’

That was because people working in MIQ facilities were ‘‘effectivel­y on Level 3 [restrictio­ns] all the time’’ — limiting what they did in their time off, and whom they mixed with.

Some nurses who decided to live alone while doing the work had been put up in rooms in the Stamford Plaza Auckland, as part of employment agreements with DHBs.

‘‘They can’t live with people who are potentiall­y vulnerable. And there are plenty of people who have been asked to move out of flats and so forth, because their flatmates don’t want them in there, because they are working in MIQ,’’ Mr Wills said.

‘‘These people are on contracts for nine months — so for some of them it’s living in a hotel for months.’’

There will likely be more hesitancy from other frontline workers. John Crocker, national secretary of the Unite Union, representi­ng some cleaners and hotel workers in more than 30 facilities, said members wanted full informatio­n about the vaccine’s safety.

‘‘They’re actually very brave, but they just want their questions answered . . . they are less worried about it than the public as a whole, I think.

‘‘They have been in a different headspace for the past year, being on the frontlines — they are very conscious [of the risk from Covid] all the time. It’s never gone away for them. We hear about precaution­s they are taking in their own households, and things like that.’’

E tu assistant national secretary Annie Newman agreed, and

❛ There will be glitches along the way, but I think the key building blocks are there. When you do programmes like

this, things are not always smooth right at

the start Immunisati­on Advisory Centre

director Dr Nikki Turner

said she was not aware of any members who had indicated they would not consent, and the union supported vaccinatio­n.

However, it had to be a choice — and although some organisati­ons could shift employees away from the frontline if agreed upon, employment should not be affected if someone did decline.

There is no evidence yet to suggest the four vaccines that New Zealand has prepurchas­ed will not not work on the socalled ‘‘UK variant’’ of Covid19, which has caused the latest community infections here. Initial studies indicate the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine and the AstraZenec­a shots should still work.

The Ministry of Health is prepared to change plans if the current outbreak widen significan­tly — communitie­s particular­ly affected may get vaccines earlier than other areas, for example.

There are signs it may have already changed the approach.

One of the current cases, a woman who worked in the laundry department of a service for airlines, is being tested periodical­ly, because her company offered that to her, despite her not being on the flying side.

On Monday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern indicated such workers might be included in the first phases of the vaccine rollout.

‘‘We are also looking closely at any border workforce who may be on a regular testing regime, but not necessaril­y through regulation.’’

Whoever goes first, precaution­s such as strict PPE use and hygiene controls will stay in place.

There is strong evidence that vaccines such as Pfizer’s greatly reduce people from getting seriously sick, but it is not understood how well they reduce Covid19’s spread.

‘‘The jury is still out as to what extent [Covid] vaccines reduce spread from people who are mildly unwell or people who are not symptomati­c at all.

‘‘We are watching closely for further data on that, it’s really important for New Zealand, and really hard to know strategica­lly how we plan without that piece of data,’’ Dr Turner said.

‘‘Through all our materials, we have really stressed that just starting to vaccinate does not mean that we have got the cure to our problem — it is not the magic bullet, and we cannot let go of our traditiona­l public health messages.

‘‘Because at this stage we do not know how protective these vaccines are against spread.

‘‘New Zealand is in a very different position from other countries.

‘‘Other Western countries’ [vaccines] are there to protect against severe disease — death and hospitalis­ation. We are hoping that we can also stop community transmissi­on. But we do not know that yet.’’

Some evidence is emerging that vaccinatio­n does curb transmissi­on, and both Dr Turner and Dr Bloomfield are hopeful that will soon become clearer.

‘‘It would be unlikely that it didn’t reduce transmissi­on significan­tly, Dr Bloomfield told reporters yesterday.

‘‘Because the main factor that makes someone infectious is the amount of virus that they are carrying around, and if they have got either an asymptomat­ic or a very, very low infection, if they are infected, then the likelihood they will transmit on to others is greatly reduced.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ?? PHOTO: NZ GOVERNMENT/ REUTERS ?? On its way . . . New Zealand’s first batch of PfizerBioN­Tech coronaviru­s disease vaccines is unloaded in Auckland on Monday.
PHOTO: NZ GOVERNMENT/ REUTERS On its way . . . New Zealand’s first batch of PfizerBioN­Tech coronaviru­s disease vaccines is unloaded in Auckland on Monday.
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