Slough Express

Vaccine rollout ‘right on target’

Royal Borough: More than 76,000 jabs administer­ed

- By Kieran Bell kieranb@baylismedi­a.co.uk @KieranB_BM

The council’s lead member for health says the borough’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n programme is ‘moving at considerab­le pace’ as the overall number of jabs given in the region passed 76,000.

Councillor Stuart Carroll (Con, Boyn Hill) was talking at a Maidenhead Town Forum meeting on Monday night, during a week in which 76,102 vaccines have been given across the Frimley Health and Care region.

This total is cumulative, meaning it is the amount of first and second doses combined.

Cllr Carroll was asked by Cllr Clive Baskervill­e (Lib Dem, Pinkneys Green) at the meeting whether there were enough places for people to receive jabs in the Royal Borough.

The health lead said that it was ‘difficult to compare’ this with other areas due to difference­s in geography.

“We are very much on target in terms of the number of people we want to see vaccinated,” Cllr Carroll said. “It is moving at considerab­le pace – so far, so good.

“We can be assured that the vaccinatio­n programme is being implemente­d effectivel­y. Of course, this is being scrutinise­d daily to ensure the rollout is optimal.”

Cllr Phil Haseler (Con, Cox Green) asked about the new South African variant of COVID-19 and whether there were any cases of it in the Royal Borough.

Questions have been asked about vaccine effectiven­ess against several new variants of the disease.

“Our director of public health [for Berkshire] is following up with Public

Health England (PHE) to check on any identified cases within the local area,” Cllr Carroll said. “That is something we hope to able to report on quickly.”

He added that ‘databases’ at PHE need to be checked to ‘validate’ any South African cases here.

On vaccines working against variants, he said: “There is a hypothesis that the vaccine should be effective against different variants.

“To what extent, and percentage, is not known, and that is a function of science and data.”

Cllr Carroll added that the UK-made Novavax vaccine ‘did capture data in different variants’ and ‘proved effective’.

“[This is] something of a benchmark for these vaccines which have already been approved,” he said.

The Royal Borough has been encouragin­g people to receive their vaccinatio­ns via a social media video with Frimley Park Hospital doctor, Dr Timothy Ho.

Dr Ho said this was ‘the first ray of hope we have in defeating this dreadful condition’, and urged people to get their jabs.

The video can be watched by searching @RBWM on Twitter.

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