The Guardian (USA)

Midwives, physios and pharmacist­s to administer future UK Covid vaccine

- Ben Quinn

Midwives, physiother­apists, pharmacist­s, student nurses and doctors are among those who will be authorised to administer a mass Covid-19 vaccine under new laws that have come into force.

They follow a consultati­on on moves to give emergency approval for a vaccine’s use across the UK and an expanded workforce, which will be trained to give the injections to immunise as much of the population as quickly possible.

The expanded workforce will undergo what the government described as a “robust training programme” after changes to the Human Medicines Regulation­s 2012 came into force on Friday.

“These legal changes will help us in doing everything we can to make sure we are ready to roll out a safe and effective Covid-19 vaccine as soon as it has passed clinical trials and undergone rigorous checks by the regulator,” said the health secretary, Matt Hancock.

A government response following a three-week consultati­on, which received 191,740 completed responses, gave a commitment to a formal review of the new regulation­s allowing the use of unlicensed medicines or vaccines within a year of any first use.

A number of amendments to the regulation­s include one that would extend the current immunity from civil liability to companies producing the vaccine, rather than just healthcare workers and manufactur­ers. This would protect them from legal liability in civil cases “but does not give them blanket immunity from civil liability,” according to the government.

The government stated that several responses had expressed concerns that the proposals outlined in the consultati­on document would make vaccines mandatory or push through an untested vaccine.

The proposals “do not create powers to make receiving a Covid-19 vaccine mandatory for the UK population,” said the government response, which added that the proposals “do not create powers to roll out an untested vaccine for the UK population.”

It noted that other respondent­s had taken the opportunit­y to express concerns about existing regulation­s enabling the temporaril­y authorisat­ion of the supply of an unlicensed vaccine in response to a public health emergency. Any authorisat­ion using the regulation­s would be short term, kept under review and would automatica­lly cease when the product is granted a full licence.

While health profession­als such as physiother­apists and occupation­al therapists who have not previously been involved in large-scale vaccinatio­n programmes are expected to be deployed, Hancock’s department said that decisions would be taken by devolved administra­tions and authoritie­s around the UK.

“For example, one UK nation might want to train student nurses and doctors to administer Covid-19 vaccines or flu vaccines whereas another UK nation may not choose that route,” the government response added.

Healthcare profession­als such as occupation­al therapists were among those recently asked if they wanted to be involved in the distributi­on of this year’s winter flu vaccine, in what appeared to be preparatio­ns to involve those sectors in the rollout of a Covid-19 vaccine.

Discussion­s between health authoritie­s and profession­al medical associatio­ns are continuing about who will administer the Covid-19 vaccine, and the creation of a new national protocol will set out who can operate under it and training requiremen­ts.

The changes to regulation­s will bolster existing powers that enable the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), if a vaccine is developed before 2021.

 ??  ?? A syringe at the Royal Free hospital, north London, after Kate Bingham, chair of the government’s vaccine taskforce, started her Novavax trial. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA
A syringe at the Royal Free hospital, north London, after Kate Bingham, chair of the government’s vaccine taskforce, started her Novavax trial. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

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