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Wait before booster ‘could be cut’ as part of effort to speed up jabs drive


By PA News

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File photo dated 23/01/21 of a phial of Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine. A new centre of excellence and training facility specialising in the technology used to create the Pfizer and Moderna coronavirus vaccines is being launched in the UK. Issue date: Tuesday August 31, 2021.

The delay between a second dose of Covid-19 vaccine and a booster could be cut from six months to five under plans reportedly being discussed by ministers and experts.

Boris Johnson said the time period between doses was an “extremely important point” and stressed the need to “keep going as fast as possible” to deliver booster jabs.

A media blitz is to be launched to encourage people to take up the booster shots, which ministers hope will drive up demand which has so far failed to match the enthusiasm of the initial vaccination programme.

Government officials and ministers said the time interval between doses was a matter for the experts on the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI).

But The Guardian said Downing Street sources confirmed the option was being examined, while The Daily Telegraph said the JCVI was showing an interest in the idea of giving booster doses a month early.

Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt said: “Does it really matter when it’s only nine weeks until the Christmas holidays if someone has their booster jab after five months?

“And should we not look at whether there should be flexibility in that decision so we can get more people in more quickly for their booster jabs?”

Vaccines minister Maggie Throup said: “The JCVI have provided the advice that it should be a minimum of six months from the second jab.”

HEALTH Coronavirus

During a visit to Northern Ireland, the Prime Minister said: “On the issue of timing, all I will say is I think we just need to keep going as fast as possible.”

Mr Johnson stressed that, unlike the early stages of the vaccine rollout, there were no problems with supply of doses, instead “it’s a demand issue”.

In a sign that demand may be picking up, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said a record 234,000 booster vaccine bookings were made on Wednesday.

“Getting your booster when offered is vital to keep you protected from Covid-19 over winter,” he said.

“I urge everyone to book theirs as soon as eligible.”

A booster shot of the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech has a dramatic effect, the firms claimed after a trial.

In the trial, a booster dose given to patients who had the initial two jabs showing a relative vaccine efficacy of 95.6% when compared to those who did not receive a booster.

The Prime Minister said the findings, which have not yet been peer reviewed, were “great results”.

The push to encourage vaccine take-up came as the daily number of cases reported in the UK surpassed 50,000 for the first time since mid-July.

HEALTH Coronavirus

But Mr Johnson is continuing to resist calls from health leaders for tighter Covid restrictions despite the rising levels of infections.

The Prime Minister acknowledged the numbers were “high” but said they were “within the parameters” forecast by scientists advising the Government.

His comments followed calls from the NHS Confederation and the British Medical Association (BMA) for ministers to activate their winter Plan B for England amid fears the health service could be overwhelmed.

BMA council chair Dr Chaand Nagpaul said the refusal to introduce supplementary measures – including Covid passports, mask-wearing in crowded public spaces and a return to working from home – amounted to “wilful negligence”.

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