The Scotsman

New vaccine set to arrive next month

- By SAM BLEWETT

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden has revealed that the UK is expecting to receive its first shipment of a new coronaviru­s vaccine next month.

Vaccine supplies have been affected by various internatio­nal issues but Mr Dowden has expressed confidence that the first Moderna jabs are still on course to arrive in April, in what would provide relief for the overall rollout programme.

“We expect that, in April, Moderna will come,” he told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC One.

The government has ordered 17 million doses of the US vaccine, which would be the third to be rolled out after the Oxford/astrazenec­a and Pfizer jabs.

The UK is expecting to receive its first shipment of a new coronaviru­s vaccine next month, a Cabinet minister has confirmed, amid challenges in internatio­nal supplies.

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden expressed confidence that the first Moderna jabs are still on course to arrive in April, in what would provide relief for the overall vaccine rollout programme.

He was doubtful, though, over the resumption of nonessenti­al internatio­nal travel and acknowledg­ed that all legal restrictio­ns may not end in June as hoped, after a government adviser raised concerns about the full relaxation.

Vaccine supplies have been affected by issues in India, where a temporary hold on Astrazenec­a exports has been imposed, and there has been trepidatio­n because of a row with the European Union over exports.

However, Mr Dowden insisted the vaccinatio­n programme remains “on course” to hit the target of offering a jab to all adults by July.

“We expect that in April Moderna will come,” he told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC One.

The US vaccine has been approved for use in the UK and would be the third to be rolled

out after the Oxford/astrazenec­a and Pfizer jabs. Some 17 million doses have been ordered by the government.

Meanwhile, professor Adam Finn, an adviser on the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on, said the limited Moderna stocks will not be a “game changer” because the “small outfit” is focusing supplies on the US.

But he said: “It adds an extra string to our bow, if you like, and it gives us an extra line of security.”

The developmen­t came as official figures showed more than 30 million people in the UK have received a first vaccine dose, accounting for about 57 per cent of all adults.

Mr Dowden guaranteed everyone will get a second dose of a coronaviru­s vaccine within 12 weeks of their first, after doubts were raised by French foreign minister Jean-yves Le Drian.

Speaking to Sky’s Sophie

Ridge on Sunday, he said: “Yes, of course, we’ve been planning that all the way through. It’s one of the most important considerat­ions as we’ve rolled out the vaccine.”

But he said “we clearly don’t currently have a surplus of vaccines” when asked about suggestion­s the UK was planning to offer 3.7 million jabs to the Republic of Ireland.

Charities including Save the Children UK and Wellcome, led by Sage scientist Sir Jeremy Farrar, have in a letter called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson to immediatel­y begin donating vaccines to poorer nations.

With more than half of adults having received a jab, they said the UK is “one of the world’s highest per-capita buyers” of vaccines and is on track to have more than 100 million surplus doses.

“There is therefore the high risk that the UK will be hoarding limited supply whilst health workers and the most vulnerable in low and middle-income countries do not have access,” their letter to the Prime Minister says.

Elsewhere, Professor Mark Woolhouse, who advises the government on the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (Spi-m), said he was “a little bit nervous about a full relaxation” planned for 21 June.

He told the BBC the road map to easing restrictio­ns in England must be “guided by the data”, particular­ly on vaccines, adding: “The idea that we can suddenly emerge from this in one great bound, I think, is a little over-optimistic.”

Mr Dowden said another lockdown “is the last thing in the world we would want to do” but acknowledg­ed dates in the road map may slip if things worsen.

“Of course they could be delayed if the situation deteriorat­es but at the moment we’re on track,” he told Andrew Marr.

Travel abroad is currently illegal other than for a few essential reasons but a government taskforce will on 12 April detail a review on whether foreign holidays can return.

Mr Dowden said “all options” are being considered when asked about a possible system that could allow shorter quarantine periods with greater testing for countries deemed less risky.

But he told Sophie Ridge there are “challenges around internatio­nal travel”, pointing towards rising infection rates in Europe.

Meanwhile, the public were warned not to “squander the gains” made in the pandemic ahead of a major easing of the lockdown to allow greater freedoms outside.

Groups of up to six, or two households, will be able to socialise in parks and gardens once more and outdoor sports facilities will reopen as the stay-at-home order ends in England today .

NHS England national medical director Professor Stephen Powis said Covid-19 still has the capacity to “wreak more havoc and ill health on a significan­tscale ”, citing concerns over new variants.

“We’ve made enormous progress that we need to build on and not squander the gains we’ve made,” Prof Powis wrote in the Sunday Telegraph. “We need to hold our nerve and drive for the line, so everyone can get back safely and soon to our normal lives.”

A further 58 people had died within 28 days of a positive test for Covid-19 as of Saturday, bringing the official UK total to 126,573.

But an analysis of further data by the PA news agency shows the wider death toll stands at more than 150,000.

 ??  ?? 0 Culture secretary oliver dowd en toldbbc1’ s The andrew marrS how that the UK’S vaccinatio­n programme remains‘ on course’
0 Culture secretary oliver dowd en toldbbc1’ s The andrew marrS how that the UK’S vaccinatio­n programme remains‘ on course’
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0 Salisbury Cathedral is being used as a vaccinatio­n centre
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