The Mail on Sunday

HOW YOU WILL GET YOUR APPOINTMEN­T

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DOES IT MATTER WHAT PART OF THE COUNTRY YOU LIVE IN?

PEOPLE most at risk will be prioritise­d, regardless of whether they are in tier 1, 2 or 3. But there has been an element of a ‘postcode lottery’. The addition of ten more vaccinatin­g hospitals across England – on top of the 50 announced to begin with – was tacit admission by the NHS that certain areas, such as virus blackspots Manchester, Bradford and Medway in Kent, were not getting their due share. Batches of the vaccine are being distribute­d according to the size of the local population, so that should mean everyone gets equal access to the available doses. But regional vaccinatio­n rates are bound to vary as hospitals will get through their patient lists at differing speeds.

HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE HAD THEIR FIRST DOSE SO FAR?

‘Tens of thousands’ have had it so far, said Health Secretary Matt Hancock on Thursday – but the exact figure has not been disclosed.

DO YOU CALL ANYONE ABOUT GETTING THE JAB?

No. When it’s your turn, you will be contacted by the NHS by phone or letter offering an appointmen­t, which will typically be a couple of days later. There have been reports about people phoning their local hospital and getting a same-day jab. This is strongly discourage­d.

SHOULD YOU HAVE THE JAB IF YOU SUFFER ALLERGIES?

Dr June Raine, chief executive of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, which approved the vaccine, said: ‘Anaphylaxi­s [a severe allergic reaction] is a known, although very rare, side effect with any vaccine. ‘Most people will not get anaphylaxi­s and the benefits in protecting people against Covid-19 outweigh the risks. ‘Anyone due to receive their vaccine should continue with their appointmen­t and discuss any questions or medical history of serious allergies with the healthcare profession­al prior to getting the jab.’

WHAT IF YOU ARE ILL ON VACCINATIO­N DAY?

Don’t attend the appointmen­t but phone the NHS on the number you were given and rearrange for another day.

ONCE AT THE CLINIC, WHAT WILL HAPPEN?

Similar with any inoculatio­n, you’ll be asked questions about your health. A first dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine will then be injected in your upper arm. You must then wait 15 minutes before leaving so staff can make sure there is no adverse reaction.

DOES THE VACCINE GIVE PROTECTION STRAIGHT AFTER THE FIRST JAB?

No. Recipients of the Pfizer/BioNTech jab begin to build immunity 12 days after the first dose – but only have full immunity a week after the second dose – ie 28 days after the first jab. You will most likely be given an appointmen­t card with details of when to return for your second, booster dose 21 days later, though paperwork procedures vary between areas. If you can’t make the booster jab appointmen­t, call to rearrange it.

WHAT IF YOU DECLINE THE JAB – BUT THEN CHANGE YOUR MIND?

You should phone the team that offered you the original invitation. They will be happy to reschedule an appointmen­t.

CAN YOU PASS THE VIRUS TO OTHERS EVEN IF YOU’VE HAD THE JAB?

This is a great unknown. Scientists are unsure if the Pfizer vaccine produces so- called ‘ sterilisin­g immunity’, as trials did not test this aspect. They only checked if it stopped people from getting ill. Pfizer says that as the vaccine is good at protecting against both serious and mild Covid illness, this ‘ suggests there is a chance to protect against infection as well’. But more test results are needed before we know for sure.

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 ??  ?? PIONEER: Margaret Keenan, 90 (left), was the first in the world to get the Pfizer jab. Above: Both sides of the vaccinatio­n card
PIONEER: Margaret Keenan, 90 (left), was the first in the world to get the Pfizer jab. Above: Both sides of the vaccinatio­n card

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