The Herald

Vaccine ‘unlikely’ to provide herd immunity before summer, says scientist

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THE UK is unlikely to achieve herd immunity through a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme before the summer, a scientist advising the Government has said.

Calum Semple, professor of outbreak medicine at the University of Liverpool and a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage), described the Oxford/astrazenec­a vaccine as a “game changer” if it is approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the coming days.

But he told BBC Breakfast: “To get the wider community herd immunity from vaccinatio­n rather than through natural infection will take probably 70 per cent to 80% of the population to be vaccinated, and that, I’m afraid, is going to take us right into the summer, I expect.”

It comes as hospitals in the south face a rise in pressure as the number of coronaviru­s patients receiving treatment heads towards the April peak. A further 41,385 Covid cases and 357 deaths were reported in the UK yesterday.

This is the highest daily number reported by the UK government, and the first time the daily total has surpassed 40,000.

Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, said:

“We know that the rate of Covid-19 admissions is rising and some trusts are reporting up to three times the number of Covid patients than at the peak of the first wave.

“This means hospitals and also ambulance services in Tier 4 areas and beyond are incredibly busy, compounded by increasing staff absences due to illness and the need to self-isolate.”

She added: “Nightingal­e hospitals were created as an insurance policy. It is possible that they will be used in the near future.

“However, they will need additional staff, which is a resource currently in short supply.”

Paramedics in the capital are receiving almost 8,000 callouts daily, and Boxing Day was described as one of London Ambulance Service’s “busiest ever days”.

The 7,918 calls received by London Ambulance Service (LAS) on December 26 was up more than 2,500 on the 5,217 received on the same day last year, and medics are receiving support from other ambulance services in the South.

Dr Katherine Henderson, the president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, described her experience of working in a hospital on Christmas Day as one of “wall to wall Covid”. She said: “We see patients who are coming in who have Covid symptoms and then we have other people coming in with other symptoms who turn out to be Covid positive.

“Between that, there’s a great deal of difficulty getting those patients through into the wards,” she told BBC Breakfast.

“The chances are that we will cope but we cope at a cost – the cost is not doing what we had hoped, which is being able to keep non-covid activities going.

“So we will stretch staff – the problem is at the moment we have a lot of staff sickness.”

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