This is intended for UK healthcare professionals.
Speaking at an NHS England webinar for care staff number one on April 8, Dr. Anna Stuart. Nikki Kanani reiterated earlier warnings that the UK source would be limited this month, with the vaccination campaign largely targeting second-dose vaccines.
She told the webinar, “We have scaled back in the coming weeks, so there are no new deliveries of first doses the week of April 12 or the week beginning April 19. “
GPoline reported the day before that in the first seven days of April, 71% of COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in the UK were doses.
Health and Human Care Secretary Matt Hancock said last month that some first doses would be delivered every week in April: the number of first doses of the vaccine is expected to fall well below the 94,240 delivered on average per day in the first seven days of that month.
In response to a webinar inquiry on vaccines for patients under 30, who will now be presented with an option to the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine if they have not yet won a first dose, Dr. Kanani reiterated the recommendation that current doses be carried with the same vaccine as planned.
Asked about the reaction of vaccination sites if patients under 30 who had won a first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine asked for a momentary dose of another vaccine, Dr Kanani said: “We try not to. “We need that, unless clinically indicated, we give no alternative.
NHS England’s medical director for COVID-19 vaccination, Dr Jonathan Leach, added that although studies are ongoing, there is recently no clinical evidence available on the implications of combining vaccines and the impact it could have on coverage alone rather than COVID-19.
NHS England’s number one director of care immunisation, Dr. Caroline Temmink said in the webinar that with the source of vaccines for first doses incredibly limited in the coming weeks, vaccination sites deserve to know if they can use the “residual vaccine from some of their current dose allocations. “” for patients under 30 years of age.
When patients under 30 years of age in cohorts 1 to 9 of the Joint Committee on Immunisation and Immunisation (JCVI) were booked for a first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine and their appointments were cancelled due to the updated MHRA and JCVI recommendation, the timing of reserve doses, the source can only be used to supply this organisation with a first shot, Explained.
The practices also deserve to send patients to other local sites with replacement doses if they didn’t have one, and NHS England will take the recommendation into account in the coming days to secure Pfizer’s vaccine “baby boxes” to care for first doses in a small number of patients under 30 in the coming days.
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