Sunday Express

A ROYAL SEAL OF APPROVAL GIVES VACCINE ROLLOUT SHOT IN THE ARM

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understood that the Queen, 94, and Philip, 99, decided that news of their jabs should be made public to prevent further speculatio­n, although which type of vaccine they had was not disclosed.

Although more than 1.5 million Britons have so far had at least one Covid jab, recent polls suggest that one in five people would refuse to be vaccinated.

Yesterday a further 1,035 people died, in the worst Saturday toll since April 18. It came as PM Boris Johnson prepares to step up the vaccinatio­n programme, with an announceme­nt due tomorrow. All those

‘The Queen has done a lot for confidence’

over 70 in the UK should be inoculated by mid-february, according to Government plans to roll out the national programme.

A Buckingham Palace spokesman confirmed yesterday: “The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh have today received Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns.”

A royal source also said they were administer­ed by a royal household doctor at Windsor Castle.

Because of their ages the couple were in the top four priority groups but waited their turn and were not given any special treatment. Yesterday Pope Francis also con

firmed that he will get vaccinated this week and urged others to follow his example.

He said: “It is an ethical choice because you are gambling with your health, with your life, but you are also gambling with the

lives of others.” Prince Charles, 72, contracted Covid-19 at the start of the pandemic in March but admitted he “got away with it quite lightly” after suffering mild symptoms. His son, Prince William, h had the infection the following month.

The Queen and Philip have been spendi ing the lockdown at Windsor after deciding to have a quiet Christmas there and forgo the traditiona­l Royal Family gathering at Sandringha­m.

Reacting to news of their vaccinatio­n yesterday, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “I’m delighted that Her Majesty the Queen & HRH the Duke of Edinburgh have received their Covid vaccine.

“We are defeating this virus jab by jab.” Labour leader Keir Starmer simply a added: “Wonderful news.”

The Queen’s former doctor Sir Richard Thompson said: “I’m delighted the Queen has had the vaccine.

“Vaccines have revolution­ised medicine around the world. Rabies, hepatitis, yellow fever can all be eliminated and people feel safe. They are amazingly cheap and last a lifetime. I would encourage everyone to t take them. The results look good and the side effects are small. Vaccines give you freedom from a very nasty disease.” Professor Thompson, a former president of the Royal College of Physicians, added: “What the Queen has done is tremendous. Lots of people admire her. By her announceme­nt she has done a lot for the confidence of the vaccine – and other prominent people should do the same.”

Dr Michael Head, an expert on vaccines and senior research fellow in global health

‘We are defeating this

virus jab by jab’

at the University of Southampto­n, said: “It is excellent to see the Queen and Prince Philip have accepted their Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns. And if the vaccine is good enough for our nonagenari­an population, then I’m sure it’s good enough for the rest of us.

“The pandemic doesn’t end if enough of us remain unvaccinat­ed – and a return to normality is surely a good enough incentive.” Dr Gillies O’bryan-tear, chairman of

policy and communicat­ions at the Faculty of Pharmaceut­ical Medicine, welcomed the news. He said: “The Queen and Prince Philip are in the high-risk category.

“Luckily, they didn’t catch the virus from Prince Charles and I welcome news that they have had the vaccine and the example they are showing.

“We don’t seem to have a big anti-vax problem that has been seen in France and the United States and the latest polls show that 75 per cent are willing to have a jab.

“Anti-vaxxers are more hardcore. I don’t think celebrity figures announcing their vaccinatio­ns will make much difference to this group.

“However there is a larger group of people who are hesitant about vaccines for whom the example of the Queen could well send a good signal.

“However the Queen is quite elderly and people in their 60s and 70s might see her as exceptiona­l as she is so much older.

“We will only get through the four main priority groups by mid-february and we won’t get to the majority of the population until the end of the year.

“The virus will still circulate in those groups but there will be a lower level of prevalence.

“However the mortality curve will start to go down and, as it does, we will have to ease the restrictio­ns for the sake of the economy and collateral harms.”

The Queen and the Duke are not the first royals in the world to announce they have been vaccinated.

Queen Margrethe II of Denmark, who is 80, announced that she had been vaccinated on New Year’s Day. Other members of our own Royal Family have made it clear that they will follow Government guidelines and only get the jabs when it is the turn for their age group.

Last month Charles told staff administer­ing the Pfizer vaccinatio­n at Gloucester­shire Royal Hospital: “I think I am way down the list and will have to wait.

“I think I’ll have to wait

for the

Astrazenec­a one before it gets to my turn. I’m some way down the list.”

Historical­ly, there are several royal precedents for going public on getting novel vaccinatio­ns or tackling pressing health threats.

In January 1957, the Queen let t it be known that Prince Charles and nd Princess Anne, then aged eight and six, had been vaccinated against polio amid safety concerns after children en died and other developed the disease when they had the jab in the United States.

Going back much further, George eorge II’S wife, Queen Caroline, and George III’S wife, Queen Charlotte, helped to popularise smallpox vaccinatio­n by publicisin­g their own family’s experience­s.

More recently, Prince Harry, before he quit royal duties, had HIV tests in front of the cameras in Britain and Barbados in 2016 in an effort to persuade others to do the same.

His decision led to a huge upsurge in people getting tests.

The pandemic has thrown the lives of the Royal Family into chaos like everyone else.

‘She has sent out

a good signal’

Last year the Queen and her family only did half the number of engagement­s they fulfilled in 2019.

Of the Queen’s 127 engagement­s, 71 were done by phone or video because of the virus.

She has largely been isolating at Windsor Castle with Prince Philip since the start of the pandemic and is likely to be confined to mostly remote engagement­s for some months to come.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? EXAMPLE: Harry has HIV test in London,
in July 2016
EXAMPLE: Harry has HIV test in London, in July 2016
 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: CHRIS Jackson/buckingham Palace/pa ?? PRAISE: The Queen and Philip were vaccinated at Windsor
Castle, inset, while Charles and
William both had
Covid
Picture: CHRIS Jackson/buckingham Palace/pa PRAISE: The Queen and Philip were vaccinated at Windsor Castle, inset, while Charles and William both had Covid

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