Sunderland Echo

‘Kick in the teeth’ for NHS staff in the dark over vaccine

- James Harrison Local Democracy Reporter @JHarrisonL­DR

The failure to prioritise Covid vaccines for some NHS workers has been branded a ‘kick in the teeth’ by one of the North East’s top hospital bosses.

Care home residents and workers are due to be first in line for jabs as they are rolled out across the country, followed by the rest of the UK’s over-80s.

But according to Ken Bremner, chief executive at South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust, his own staff haveno idea when they will be allocated a dose.

He said: “I haven’t got any date nor expectatio­n at the moment on when any of our front facing staff in hospital, of which I’ve got 7,000, are going to receive this vaccinatio­n.

“Clearly there’s been an about face on this from the Government in terms of pushing this out to care homes, which is fine, but it has left the NHS scratching its head.

“It’s slightly disappoint­ing Sunderland and South Tyneside seem to have been bypassed with some of this.”

Mr B re mn er, who is responsibl­e for Sunderland Royal Hospital and South Tyneside District Hospital, was speaking at a meeting of Sunderland City Council’s Health and Wellbeing Board.

The panel’s chairman, Cllr

Geoff Walker, the city council’s cabinet member for Healthy City, backed the hospital boss, claiming the oversight had left Wearside and South Tyneside looking like the ‘poor relation’.

And Cllr Louise Farthing, cabinet member for Children,

Education and Skills, went a step further, claiming front line NHS workers should have been first in the queue for a vaccine as they have ‘put their lives on the line’, during the pandemic.

Mr Bremner added: “It

feels like having to deal with the scraps which are left on the table.

“At the end of the day we will do what we can and that’s just where we are, but we will need to manage carefully the confidence and morale of our

NHS staff.

“They have taken a battering for the last eight months – it feels a bit like a kick in the teeth.”

The first vaccines were administer­ed in the UK on Tuesday, in what has been seen as a

landmark moment for the fight against Covid-19.

But health chiefs, experts and politician­s have warned households must stick to the rules and not let their guard down while infections remain high.

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 ??  ?? A needle is filled from a phial of Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at the RVI in Newcastle, on the first day of the largest immunisati­on programme in the UK’s history.
A needle is filled from a phial of Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at the RVI in Newcastle, on the first day of the largest immunisati­on programme in the UK’s history.
 ??  ?? Ken Bremner, chief executive of South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust.
Ken Bremner, chief executive of South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust.
 ??  ?? Cllr Louise Farthing, cabinet member for Children, Education and Skills.
Cllr Louise Farthing, cabinet member for Children, Education and Skills.

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