The Daily Telegraph

Mass distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccine could take a year, say experts

- By Sarah Knapton Science editor

A CORONAVIRU­S vaccine could take a year to distribute and Covid restrictio­ns will need to be in place until herd immunity has been achieved, experts have warned.

A report from the Royal Society’s Delve group has looked into the hurdles of a mass roll-out of a vaccine.

In a briefing before its publicatio­n, the group warned that even if a vaccine was ready by next spring it would take many months to vaccinate enough people for life to return to normal. It estimates that even in a best-case scenario, where each five-year age group could be vaccinated every 10 days, it would still take six months to get through most of the population.

Report author Prof Nilay Shah, head of the department of chemical engineerin­g at Imperial College London, said even if a vaccine was available and approved it would not immediatel­y make a difference on a national scale.

“It will take a long time to work through the different priority groups, so it is not a question of life returning to normal in March, even if with a following wind and passing all those hurdles.

“We may be able to start the process in March, but to get through that vaccinatio­n it’s many months, maybe more than a year. We need to recognise we are trying to do something that has never been done before.

“We need to vaccinate at around 10 times the rate of the flu vaccinatio­n programme, and thousands of people will need to be retrained.

“That needs to be communicat­ed clearly so that the expectatio­ns are realistic because they do relate back to nonpharmac­eutical interventi­ons [lockdown restrictio­ns] that we will need to make for many months ahead.”

Prof Shah said the NHS would need to recruit up to 20,000 people to deliver the vaccines and may need to build field hospitals for the mass vaccinatio­n programme.

Last week Sir Patrick Vallance said there was a chance a vaccine would be ready this year, but added that next year was looking more likely. Boris Johnson has also signalled that restrictio­ns will need to be in place until March.

Dozens of vaccines are in trials across the world, and Oxford University appears to be the furthest ahead. Final phase-three human trials are in progress and results may be available by next month.

The report estimates that at least 70 per cent of the population would need to be vaccinated for herd immunity, if the vaccine was 100 per cent effective, but it may need to be higher if the jab is less potent. It is also likely that an annual vaccinatio­n programme will be needed to keep on top of the virus.

Co-author Prof Charles Bangham, codirector of the Institute of Infection at Imperial College London, said: “Due process is important and even when it becomes available it will take some time to manufactur­e the necessary number of doses and, even if effective, it ’s unlikely we will be able to get back to normal, even with the vaccine. Even when we have an effective vaccine it is not likely the virus will go away; it’s not going to end the infection completely.”

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