Sunday Express

BORIS UNVEILS LOCKDOWN EXIT PLAN

- By David Maddox POLITICAL EDITOR

THE coronaviru­s vaccine drive is to be accelerate­d tomorrow with hundreds of thousands of over-80s set to receive a letter inviting them for the jab.

The move comes as vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi assured Sunday Express readers that the public “are in safe hands”, with the NHS and military ensuring the vaccines get to their target groups.

It is “our best way out of this pandemic”, he said.

On Friday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak joined the vaccinatio­n drive, visiting a centre in New Cross, south-east London, to reassure the vulnerable as they prepared for their jabs.

It comes as the Government prepares to unveil its vaccine strategy with seven new mass vaccine centres. It will also

‘I am confident we can do it’

reveal a major new testing g programme aimed at people who are carrying the e disease but do not have symptoms. ptoms.

Around 500,000 letters etters are to be sent out this week to invite people le aged over 80 to have e their vaccine in centres within 30-45 minutes drive of their home.

This follows the first 130,000 letters being delivered over the weekend.

Appointmen­ts can be booked at the e centres – including ng London’s Nightingal­e ale Hospital and the Etihad tihad Stadium in Manchester ester – over the phone or online. line.

At the launch, , Prime Minister Boris Johnson nson will say: “Our plan is to vaccinate as many people as possible across the entire UK as quickly as we can.

“And with more than 1,000 sites across the country, including seven new mass vaccinatio­n centres, we will help hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people over the coming weeks as we accelerate towards offering 12 million people the jab in England by the middle of February.”

He will warn: “There are deeply challengin­g weeks ahead but today signals another step forward in the race to protect the public and defeat the virus.” The seven centres will be the EXCEL Centre in east London, Etihad Stadium in Manchester, Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol, the Centre for Life in the North-east and Yorkshire, Epsom Downs Racecourse in Surrey, Robertson House in

S Stevenage, Herts, a and Millennium P Point in Birmin ingham. The minister in charge of the vacc vaccines rollout, Mr Zahaw Zahawi reiterated the messag message of the Prime Minister that the country is ready to go ahead.

He said: ““It’s ambitious but I’m confide confident we can do it, not least because we are drawing on the strengths of two of this country’s most treasured assets: the NHS and our Armed Forces. We’re in safe hands.

“By the end of this week, we will have over 1,000 Gp-led vaccinatio­n sites up and running, as well as 223 hospital sites, seven giant vaccinatio­n centres and the first wave of 200 community pharmacies.

“It means it won’t be too long before

we can expand our programme down the priority list and more of us can get the jabs, using our new national booking service to make appointmen­ts.”

The Scottish government announced that it has been allocated 533,640 doses of the Oxford/astrazenec­a vaccine this month.

These doses are available for local order and delivery to the different parts of Scotland over January.

A “war spirit” has seen many different sectors of the country volunteer to get involved in the programme.

Eight in 10 rural pubs backed a plan that they become vaccine centres, especially in remote locations.

Mo Metcalf-fisher, of the Countrysid­e Alliance, which conducted the poll, said: “It is no surprise that so many publicans are in favour of allowing their otherwise unused premises to be used in the roll out of the vaccinatio­n at this critical time for our country, especially in rural areas.

“The comforting news that a vaccine is available offers a ray of hope at this bleak time and we need to press

ahead.” Hotel chains have also offered their premises as centres, and community pharmacist­s are ready to be involved.

And footage has emerged of elderly people stuck in huge Covid-19 vaccinatio­n queues in near-freezing temperatur­es in London and Northampto­n.

The Jenner Practice, in Forest Hill, south London opened its doors to those aged 80 and over on Friday – and was quickly deluged with patients.

Paul Demetrious posted a video on Twitter after his mum

and dad attempted to get vaccinated as the temperatur­e dropped to just 2C.

Dr Gillies O’bryan-tear, of the Faculty of Pharmaceut­ical

Medicine, said he is confident that the NHS – with the nation’s support – would prevail. He said: “I am quite optimistic. The NHS has shown

itself to be very good at mass vaccinatio­n programmes.

“A centralise­d NHS Service works better when you want to vaccinate the whole population. It has shown it can do big vaccinatio­n programmes, like the flu vaccine. I think people have also put their hands up to help. We are all fed up with this pandemic – people have lost their lives and jobs. So people are now working together. It is a war spirit.”

In a further move to tackle the spread of the vaccine the Government has announced it is stepping up the testing of people who show no symptoms of the disease.

It will mean that community testing will be expanded across all local authoritie­s in England, with councils encouraged to target testing at people who cannot work from home during lockdown.

Around one in three with Covid does not display any symptoms. Expansion of asymptomat­ic testing will identify more positive cases and ensure that those who are infected self-isolate.

In addition to local authoritie­s, NHS Test and Trace will also work closely with other government department­s to scale up workforce testing. Many are already piloting regular workforce testing, with 15 large employers having taken up this offer already across 64 sites.

These include organisati­ons operating in the food, manufactur­ing, energy and retail sectors, and within the public sector, including job centres, transport networks, and the military. An estimated 27,000 tests have taken place across the public sector as part of pilot schemes so far.

‘We’re stepping up the testing’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? AID: Chancellor Rishi Sunak helps at hub in London. Inset, vaccinatio­n booths at Ashton Gate in Bristol
AID: Chancellor Rishi Sunak helps at hub in London. Inset, vaccinatio­n booths at Ashton Gate in Bristol
 ??  ?? HOPES: Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock
HOPES: Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? THE WAIT IS ALMOST OVER: People queue for the jab in a cold Northampto­n yesterday
THE WAIT IS ALMOST OVER: People queue for the jab in a cold Northampto­n yesterday
 ?? Pictures: SIMON WALKER/HM Treasury ??
Pictures: SIMON WALKER/HM Treasury

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