Western Morning News (Saturday)

Half of UK adults should get C-19 vaccine by May

- HARRIET LINE

MORE than half of all UK adults should receive a coronaviru­s vaccine by May, the Government has announced, as the jabs rollout was buoyed by studies suggesting they are safe and effective against a new strain.

Downing Street confirmed that the vaccine programme planned to reach all those aged 50 and over, as well as adults aged 16-65 in an at-risk group, by May - having previously said it aimed to do so “by the spring”.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock warned that “lots of things have got to go right” to hit the goal, including supply, but he said he was “sure” it was achievable. More than 10.9 million first doses have already been given.

According to the Government’s vaccines delivery plan, some 32 million people across the UK are estimated to fall into the first nine groups. There are 52.7 million people aged 18 and over in the UK.

The target was disclosed as the Cabinet Office announced that local elections in England and Wales would go ahead as planned on May 6 - though voters will have to wear face coverings and will be asked to take their own pen or pencil to mark their ballot. It will be seen as indicative of lockdown restrictio­ns easing in the spring, with reports that outdoor team and individual sports, as well as outdoor gatherings, could be possible within weeks of a planned return of schools from March 8.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has faced sustained pressure from some Tory backbenche­rs to relax the measures as soon as possible, but scientists advising the Government have warned against opening up too quickly.

Professor Graham Medley, chairman of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (Spi-M), said ministers should “make decisions dependent on the circumstan­ces, rather than being driven by a calendar of wanting to do things”.

But Mark Harper, chairman of the Covid Recovery Group, made up of lockdown-sceptic Conservati­ve MPs, said it will be “almost impossible to justify having any restrictio­ns in place at all” by the time the top nine groups have been vaccinated.

In a sign that the current measures are working, the reproducti­on number, or R value, of coronaviru­s transmissi­on across the UK fell to between 0.7 and 1, according to the latest Government figures - down from between 0.7 and 1.1 last week.

And estimates from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggested about one in 65 people in private households in England had Covid-19 between January 24 and 30 – compared with one in 55 the previous week.

However, a further 1,014 people died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Friday and there were another 19,114 lab-confirmed cases of coronaviru­s in the UK.

Mr Johnson is due to publish a roadmap for lifting the restrictio­ns later this month. Any decision to relax the measures will be boosted by new research from Oxford University suggesting its vaccine with AstraZenec­a is effective at fighting the new UK coronaviru­s strain.

Researcher­s said it has a similar efficacy against the variant, compared with the original strain of Covid-19 against which it was tested, following concern over whether or not the vaccines would continue to be effective.

In a separate bid to keep out new variants from overseas, the Government is booking thousands of hotel rooms near airports as part of new quarantine rules for internatio­nal arrivals.

The requiremen­t for travellers returning to the UK from “red list” countries to self-isolate in a Government­approved hotel for 10 days will be implemente­d from February 15.

Meanwhile, analysis by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) showed the vaccines being rolled out across the UK are “extremely safe”, with the “overwhelmi­ng majority” of suspected side-effects being mild. The drugs regulator said its analysis showed a reporting rate of three suspected side-effects for every 1,000 doses of vaccine administer­ed with the issues reported being similar to those for the annual flu vaccine.

 ?? Finnbarr Webster ?? > Bristol artist Luke Jerram with his glass sculpture of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a coronaviru­s vaccine, left, alongside his earlier work of the virus itself, in glass. The sculpture, one million times larger than the actual vaccine nanopartic­le, marks the ten millionth vaccinatio­n to be administer­ed in the UK and will be sold for charity
Finnbarr Webster > Bristol artist Luke Jerram with his glass sculpture of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a coronaviru­s vaccine, left, alongside his earlier work of the virus itself, in glass. The sculpture, one million times larger than the actual vaccine nanopartic­le, marks the ten millionth vaccinatio­n to be administer­ed in the UK and will be sold for charity

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