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UNITED KINGDOM

All adults to receive first COVID-19 shot by September

Published:Monday | January 18, 2021 | 12:09 AM
Britain’s Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, watches as Melvin Allanson receives the first of two COVID-19 vaccination shots during a visit to the vaccination centre at Robertson House in Stevenage, England.
Britain’s Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, watches as Melvin Allanson receives the first of two COVID-19 vaccination shots during a visit to the vaccination centre at Robertson House in Stevenage, England.
Travellers walk towards the COVID-19 testing centre at Heathrow Airport in London on, Sunday. The UK closed all travel corridors from January 18 to protect against the coronavirus, with travellers entering the country from overseas required to have proof o
Travellers walk towards the COVID-19 testing centre at Heathrow Airport in London on, Sunday. The UK closed all travel corridors from January 18 to protect against the coronavirus, with travellers entering the country from overseas required to have proof of a negative COVID-19 test.
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LONDON (AP):

The UK government plans to offer a first dose of COVID-19 vaccine to every adult by September as the nation’s health service battles the worst crisis in its 72-year history.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said on Sunday that the government is still opening new vaccination sites and will soon begin trials that will give round-the-clock injections at some locations to help increase the pace of delivery.

“Our target is, by September, to have offered all the adult population a first dose,’’ he told Sky News. “If we can do it faster than that, great, but that’s the road map.”

Britain has more than 51 million adults in its population of 67.5 million people.

The ambitious vaccination programme comes amid crushing pressures on the National Health Service (NHS). Already-beleaguered hospitals are admitting another COVID-19 patient every 30 seconds, putting the service in its most precarious situation ever, said Simon Stevens, chief executive of NHS England.

“The facts are very clear and I’m not going to sugarcoat them, hospitals are under extreme pressure and staff are under extreme pressure,’’ he told the BBC. “Since Christmas Day we’ve seen another 15,000 increase in the in-patients in hospitals across England. That’s the equivalent of filling 30 hospitals full of coronavirus patients.”

STAGGERING HEALTHCARE

Britain’s healthcare system is staggering as doctors and nurses battle a more contagious variant of the coronavirus, coupled with cold, wet winter weather that drives people inside, where infections spread more easily.

The surge in infections has pushed the number of people hospitalised with COVID-19 to a record 37,475, more than 73 per cent higher than during the first peak of the pandemic in April. Britain has reported 88,747 coronavirus-related deaths, more than any other country in Europe and the fifth-highest number worldwide.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson on January 2 ordered England into its third national lockdown in an effort to slow the spread of the virus and protect the NHS, which Stevens said now has some 50,000 employees off work due to COVID-19 infections and exposure quarantines.

The government says it won’t review the lockdown measures until mid-February, by which time it plans to offer at least one dose of vaccine to everyone over 70, as well as to front-line healthcare workers and others who are especially vulnerable to COVID-19.

Once that goal has been reached, the UK will offer the vaccine to everyone over 50 before finally moving on to everyone over 18.

Unlike other nations, Britain has chosen to stretch out the time between vaccine doses from 21 days to up to 12 weeks – a decision that means more people will get at least one dose more quickly.

Britain has approved three vaccines – ones by Pfizer-BioNTech, Oxford-AstraZeneca and Moderna. The first two are already being used, while the Moderna doses are not expected until spring.