Santa Cruz Sentinel

UK gears up for huge vaccinatio­n plan

- By Pan Pylas

Shipments of the coronaviru­s vaccine have been delivered in the U.K. in super-cold containers.

LONDON >> Shipments of the coronaviru­s vaccine developed by American drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech were delivered Sunday in the U.K. in super- cold containers, two days before it goes public in an immunizati­on program that is being closely watched around the world.

Around 800,000 doses of the vaccine were expected to be in place for the start of the immunizati­on program on Tuesday, a day that Health Secretary Matt Hancock has reportedly dubbed as “V-Day,” a nod to triumphs in World War II.

“To know that they are here, and we are amongst the first in the country to actually receive the vaccine and therefore the first in the world, is just amazing,” said Louise Coughlan, joint chief pharmacist at Croydon Health Services NHS Trust, just south of London.

“I’m so proud,” she said after the trust, which runs Croydon University Hospital, took delivery of the vaccine.

Last week, the U.K. became the first country to authorize the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine for emergency use. In trials, the vaccine was shown to have around 95% efficacy. Vaccinatio­ns

will be administer­ed starting Tuesday at around 50 hospital hubs in England. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will also begin their vaccinatio­n rollouts the same day.

Government­s and health agencies around the world will be monitoring the British vaccinatio­n program, which will take months, to note its successes and failures and adjust their own plans accordingl­y. The U.S. hopes to start vaccinatio­ns later this month. British

regulatory authoritie­s are also examining data on the vaccines from American biotechnol­og y company Moderna and AstraZenec­aOxford University.

Russia on Saturday began vaccinatin­g thousands of doctors, teachers and others at dozens of centers in Moscow with its Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine, which was approved over the summer after being tested in only a few dozen people.

The excitement in Brit

ain, which has Europe’s highest virus-related death toll at more than 61,000, was palpable.

“Despite the huge complexiti­es, hospitals will kickstart the first phase of the largest scale vaccinatio­n campaign in our country’s history from Tuesday,” said Professor Stephen Powis, NHS England’s national medical director.

Patients aged 80 and above who are already attending hospitals as outpatient­s and those being discharged after a stay in the hospital will be among the first to receive the jab. Hospitals will also start inviting over 80s in for a vaccine shot and will work with nursing homes to book staff into vaccinatio­n clinics. Any appointmen­ts not taken up will be offered to those health workers deemed to be at the highest risk of COVID-19. Everyone who is vaccinated will need a booster jab 21 days later.

Buckingham Palace refused to comment on speculatio­n that Queen Elizabeth II, 94, and her 99-yearold husband, Prince Philip, will soon be vaccinated and then make it public, a move that could reassure anyone nervous about getting a vaccinatio­n.

“Our goal is totally to protect every member of the population, Her Majesty, of course, as well,” Dr. June Raine, chief executive of Britain’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, which authorized the vaccine, told the BBC.

The U.K. has secured 40 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine, which can cover 20 million people. Since the British government will only immunize people over 16, around 55 million people in the U.K. will be eligible. In total, Britain has procured 357 million doses of seven vaccine candidates, including 100 million of the much cheaper Oxford vaccine, which has a lower efficacy rate than the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines.

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 ?? GARETH FULLER — POOL ?? A pharmacy technician takes delivery of the first batch of COVID-19 vaccines at Croydon University Hospital in Croydon, England.
GARETH FULLER — POOL A pharmacy technician takes delivery of the first batch of COVID-19 vaccines at Croydon University Hospital in Croydon, England.

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