Otago Daily Times

Vaccinatio­n in South needs scaling up significan­tly

- MIKE HOULAHAN mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

THE Southern Covid19 vaccinatio­n rollout needs to be ‘‘put on steroids’’ to meet the Ministry of Health target of a fivefold increase in injections.

Despite challenges finding enough people to deliver the vaccinatio­ns needed in the next few weeks, Gore Health chief executive Karl Metzler, who is on secondment to the Southern District Health Board to help manage the programme, was optimistic that could be achieved.

He told an SDHB meeting yesterday the district had just passed the milestone of 20,000 people vaccinated, half of whom were frontline health workers.

A total of 4500 Southerner­s had now got their second dose.

‘‘Our overall vaccinatio­n rate is still on target but it has slowed a bit, I think due to stat days.

‘‘We have had to parachute teams into more remote rural areas, which slows production as they are only able to get through fewer vaccinatio­ns.’’

The vaccinatio­n of people in group 3 (people regarded as being at risk of getting very sick from Covid19) started earlier this week and represente­d a major scaling up of the campaign, Mr Metzler said.

‘‘To put it in perspectiv­e, that’s roughly 109,000 Southerner­s we will need to jab.

‘‘That’s about 220,000 doses that need to happen between now and July, and we did 16,000 in all of April.

‘‘The vaccinatio­n rollout needs to be put on steroids, basically, but we are confident that we can deliver it.’’

Mr Metzler said one obstacle the vaccinatio­n programme still had to clear was having enough staff to inject all those in group 3, a barrier which became higher when the remainder of the population was able to start receiving its shots.

‘‘It is challengin­g because it is a very manual process, not just giving injections but also keeping informatio­n accurate and up to date.’’

The SDHB had received 800 expression­s of interest from people wanting to help the vaccinatio­n programme, and had so far hired 112 people to fill 90 fulltime equivalent positions.

‘‘The training that those people require creates a bottleneck, which is a national issue,’’ Mr Metzler said.

Some retired medical practition­ers had been recalled to work, but as the group 4 vaccinatio­n deadline loomed, general practices and community pharmacies would play a vital role.

‘‘Our key risk is standing up that workforce, everybody knows that . . . but we are cautiously optimistic.’’

The SDHB’s new vaccinatio­n booking system was almost up and running, and discussion­s were ongoing with Maori and Pasifika health providers to start delivering vaccinatio­ns from next month.

❛ The vaccinatio­n rollout needs to be put on steroids, basically

SECONDDOSE Covid19 vaccinatio­n clinics have started in Queenstown.

Vaccinatio­n clinics will be open in the resort over the next fortnight to provide border workers, their family contacts and frontline health workers with their second Covid vaccinatio­n — the first vaccinatio­ns were administer­ed about three weeks ago.

In a statement, Southern District Health Board Covid19 vaccine rollout incident controller Hamish Brown said eligible people who missed their first vaccine would also be able to book in.

Planning was also under way to open regular clinics from the beginning of June for ‘‘group 3’’ vaccinatio­ns — for people aged 65 or older, those living with a disability, pregnant women, those with a relevant underlying health condition and people living in custodial settings.

Mr Brown said since the transtasma­n bubble opened on April 19 the border at Queenstown had been monitored by Public Health South, which provided a health presence at Queenstown Airport to meet every internatio­nal flight.

Lakes District Hospital was also working with the health board’s emergency management team to manage patients if they came to the emergency department with Covid19 symptoms.

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