Britain could vaccinate 24million people by Easter: AstraZeneca say they can deliver 2million doses a week. But with millions more facing Tier 4 lockdown until jab takes effect can Health Secretary get his act together?

  • UK has ordered 100 million doses - enough to vaccinate 50million people - with first jabs starting on Monday
  • Ministers now face the mammoth challenge of trying to vaccinate 2million people a week until Easter
  • Boris Johnson expected to announce which regions will be moved to Tier 4 later today due to increasing ratesBritain could vaccinate 24million people against coronavirus by Easter after the game-changing Oxford University/ AstraZeneca jab was approved this morning and its makers promised to deliver 2million doses a week.

    In a massive boost to ending the pandemic within months, the UK medical regulator green-lit the vaccine, which is cheap, easy to transport to care homes and protects 70 per cent of people after just 21 days. Regulators are now recommending the jab is given in two doses three months apart, rather than over a four-week period, allowing millions more to be immunised over a shorter time period.

    Britain has already ordered 100million doses and injections are due to start on Monday, but ministers now face the mammoth challenge of trying to vaccinate 2million people a week to curb the spread of a highly-infectious mutant strain racing across the country.The announcement came as Britain recorded 981 Covid deaths in the deadliest day of the pandemic since April and No10 announced three quarters of England will be in Tier 4 from midnight, adding the rest of the South East, Midlands, North East, parts of the North West and parts of the South West to the top bracket. 

    All remaining areas - barring just 2,000 people on the Isles of Scilly - are being escalated to Tier 3, including Liverpool, previously seen as an example of how to cope with the disease. It means virtually the whole of England is facing brutal lockdown until the Spring. Matt Hancock tried to soften the blow by claiming regulatory approval for the Oxford/University AstraZeneca jab means the crisis will be 'over' by spring.

    During a round of interviews this morning, AstraZeneca boss Pascal Soriot promised the firm will be able to hit the ambitious target of delivering 2million doses a week by mid-January, while Matt Hancock claimed the NHS could deliver the jab 'at the pace AstraZeneca can manufacture' and insisted the bold aim was 'absolutely deliverable'. But he refused to commit to an actual figure. 

    There will be doubts about whether scaling up vaccinations so significantly in a matter of weeks is possible given that only about 280,000 Brits are being inoculated against Covid each week and NHS workers — who play a critical role in administering the vaccines — are dealing with record numbers of hospital patients. Mr Hancock has also repeatedly failed to hit numerous targets throughout the pandemic, including goals to ramp up test capacity. 

    Top experts, including members of SAGE, have warned ministers they need to ramp up weekly vaccination rates seven-fold by mid-January to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed this winter. The new strain of Covid has caused a sharp spike in infections and, while it doesn't appear more deadly, it spreads more easily than the regular virus which increases the overall volume of people falling ill and needing hospital care.

    Today's approval only applies to two full doses and not the half-dose, full-dose regimen that scientists claimed was up to 50 per cent more effective, with regulators admitting there was not enough data to approve the latter tactic. But it still significantly increases the likelihood of the Government achieving the target because, unlike the Pfizer jab, Oxford's can be stored in a normal fridge which makes it easier to transport to care homes and GP surgeries. 

    Ministers were given an additional boost this morning as the Government's joint committee on vaccination and immunisation (JCVI) recommended a single dose of either vaccine should be given to as many vulnerable people as possible, rather than sticking to the two-dose strategy.

    Regulators have said that both vaccines provide sufficient protection against Covid after the first injection, with the second shot providing long-term immunity. Britons will still receive a second dose of vaccine, but it could be as long as three months later as opposed to the initial plan to give it within four weeks.    

    No10 has pinned its hopes on the Oxford vaccine finally putting an end to the perpetual cycle of locking down and opening up, which has devastated the economy and wider healthcare. 

    But life is unlikely to go back to normal by Easter even if 24million people are vaccinated because two-thirds of the population will still be vulnerable to the disease. Scientists say herd immunity — when enough of a population becomes immune that the virus fizzles out — will only be achieved when 70 per cent of people are protected. Some experts in the US have warned the figure could be as high as 90 per cent.

    Top experts, including members of SAGE, have warned ministers they need to ramp up weekly vaccination rates sevenfold to 2million by mid-January to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed this winter. Currently about 280,000 Brits are being inoculated each week

    Top experts, including members of SAGE, have warned ministers they need to ramp up weekly vaccination rates sevenfold to 2million by mid-January to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed this winter. Currently about 280,000 Brits are being inoculated each week

    Mr Hancock claimed the NHS could deliver the jab 'at the pace AstraZeneca can manufacture' and insisted the bold aim was 'absolutely deliverable'

    Mr Hancock claimed the NHS could deliver the jab 'at the pace AstraZeneca can manufacture' and insisted the bold aim was 'absolutely deliverable'

    A volunteer is administered the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, which has been approved for use today

    A volunteer is administered the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, which has been approved for use today

    The vaccine approval came as:
    • Millions in the south-west, Midlands and Lancashire are expected to be added to Tier 4 restrictions closing all non-essential shops when the Government announces its shake up of the local lockdown system;
    • Secondary schools are expected to shut until January 11 at the earliest amid spiking cases in teenagers - but scientists want them closed until February. Boris Johnson will make the final decision today;
    • GP Dr Ellie Cannon questioned why vaccinations using the Oxford jab aren't starting until Monday, tweeting: Let GPs start vaccinating today. We are ready, lives are being lost while we wait for January 4';
    • The WHO has warned the coronavirus is not necessarily 'the big one' and a more deadly pandemic could sweep the globe;
    • Chief medical officer Chris Whitty won praise after being spotted doing his rounds on the respiratory ward of a London hospital over the Christmas weekend;
    • Author Michael Rosen, 74, says his 'near death' intensive care Covid battle has left him almost blind in one eye, partially deaf and suffering breathless dizzy spells; 
    • An A&E nurse has tested positive for Covid-19 eight days after he received Pfizer vaccine;
    • London ICUs have asked major hospitals in Yorkshire if they will agree to take some patients as wards hospital admissions exceed peak of first wave;
    • 51,135 further cases and 414 deaths were reported on Tuesday.

    Mr Hancock said today's decision meant Britain can 'accelerate the vaccine rollout' and 'brings forward the day when we can get our lives back to normal', adding: 'We will be able to get out of this by the Spring.'

    He told Sky News: 'It is going to be a difficult few weeks ahead. We can see the pressures right now on the NHS and it is absolutely critical that people follow the rules and do everything they can to stop the spread, particularly of the new variant of this virus that transmits so much faster.

    'But we also know that there is a route out of this. The vaccine provides that route out. We have all just got to hold our nerve over the weeks to come.' 

    Asked if he could provide a timeline for when under-50s without pre-existing conditions may be vaccinated, Mr Hancock told Times Radio: 'It depends on the speed of manufacture, I wish I could give you a date, your invitation right now, but we can't because it depends on the speed of the manufacture.

    'This product, it's not a chemical compound it's a biological product so it's challenging to make, so that is the rate-limiting factor in terms of the rollout.

    'Now that we have two vaccines being delivered we can accelerate, how fast we can accelerate will be determined by how fast the manufacturers can produce.

    'But what I can tell you is that I now have a very high degree of confidence that by the spring enough of those who are vulnerable will be protected to allow us to get out of this pandemic situation.

    'We can see the route out and the route out is guided by this vaccine and that's why this is such good news for everyone.' 

    The race is now on to ramp up vaccine capacity to 2million per week. 'Professor Lockdown' Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College London and member of SAGE, told the BBC yesterday the 2million doses was 'what we need to be getting to, very quickly indeed'.

    Professor Ferguson –  who quit SAGE after he was caught breaking social distancing rules to meet his married lover during Britain's first lockdown – was giving his support to a study by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, which concluded the vaccine target would need to be met and Tier 4 would be needed across England to protect intensive care wards.

    The study said there was nothing to indicate the new strain of the virus, which first emerged in Kent in September and has quickly become the dominant strain, was more deadly or causes more serious illness than normal Covid.

    But because it appears to be 50 per cent more infectious, it has the potential to cause a more severe wave of cases that lead to many more hospitalisations. 

    'It may be necessary to greatly accelerate vaccine roll-out to have an appreciable impact in suppressing the resulting disease burden,' the study said.

    Oxford University/AstraZeneca's vaccine was approved this morning by the UK medical regulator and will begin to be rolled out from Monday, raising hopes that the 2million a week target can be achieved.

    AstraZeneca's chief executive Pascal Soriot told BBC Radio 4's Today programme deliveries will be ramped up 'very rapidly' in the first and second week of January.

    He added: 'We will start delivering this week – maybe today or tomorrow we will be shipping our first doses. The vaccination will start next week and we will get to one million a week and beyond that very rapidly.

    'We can go to two million. In January we will already possibly be vaccinating several million people and by the end of the first quarter we are going to be in the tens of millions already.'

    AstraZeneca said it aimed to supply millions of doses in the first quarter of next year as part of an agreement with the Government to supply up to 100 million doses. 

    In another major boost, the JCVI this morning gave the Government the green light to give just a single dose of the Covid vaccines to as many vulnerable groups as possible, as opposed to sticking to the intended two-dose strategy. 

    The JCVI said everyone who receives the Pfizer/BioNTech and Oxford University/AstraZeneca vaccines will still receive their second dose, but this will be within 12 weeks of the first. They were originally intended to be given within a month of each other.

    HOW DOES THE OXFORD VACCINE WORK?

    The vaccine – called ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 – uses a harmless, weakened version of a common virus which causes a cold in chimpanzees.

    Researchers have already used this technology to produce vaccines against a number of pathogens including flu and Zika.

    The virus is genetically modified so that it is impossible for it to reproduce  in humans and cause infection.

    Scientists have transferred the genetic instructions for coronavirus's specific 'spike protein' – which it needs to invade cells – to the vaccine.

    When the vaccine enters cells inside the body, it uses this genetic code to force the body's own cells to produce the surface spike protein of the coronavirus.

    This induces an immune response because it makes those cells look like the virus, which effectively works as a training aid for the immune system to learn how to fight the virus if the real thing gets into the body.

    In clinical trials Oxford's vaccine was 62 per cent effective at preventing a coronavirus diagnosis if given as two doses, and 90 per cent when one half dose was given followed by a further full dose.

    The difference, experts say, may be because a smaller dose the first time allows the body to create a better picture of what the virus will look like before it attempts to launch a full-scale attack, as with a full dose, giving quality first and then quantity later.

    Pfizer warns there is NO proof its Covid jab works when doses are taken 12 weeks apart as UK regulator scraps 21-day rule in desperate attempt to get millions more vaccinated 

    Pfizer warned today there is 'no data' to show a single dose of its coronavirus vaccine provides long-protection after the UK scrapped its original jab rollout plan.

    The UK medical regulator is now recommending Covid jabs are given in two doses three months apart, rather than over the intended four-week period, to allow millions more people to be immunised over a shorter time period.

    The strategy will apply to both Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine and the newly approved jab by Oxford/AstraZeneca, despite limited data around the effectiveness of the initial doses. 

    It is a direct response to spiking Covid cases and hospitalisations across the UK that are being driven by a new, highly-infectious strain that emerged in the South East England in September. 

    Health bosses now want to give as many people as possible an initial dose, rather than holding back the second doses, so more of the population can enjoy at least some protection.

    In a thinly-veiled swipe at the UK, Pfizer warned that any 'alternative' dosing regimens should be closely monitored by health authorities. The US firm said there was 'no data' in its studies to show its vaccine protects against Covid when taken 12 weeks apart.

    'Data from the phase three study demonstrated that, although partial protection from the vaccine appears to begin as early as 12 days after the first dose, two doses of the vaccine are required to provide the maximum protection against the disease, a vaccine efficacy of 95 per cent,' Pfizer said in a statement.

    'There are no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose is sustained after 21 days.' 

    Throughout the testing stage of the Oxford vaccine, volunteers were given a second dose four weeks after receiving the initial shot. 

    However, AstraZeneca confirmed a small sub-group was injected with a second dose following a three-month wait and enjoyed sufficient protection.  Professor Wei Shen Lim, chairman of the JCVI, said that with Covid infection rates currently at a high level, the 'immediate urgency is for rapid and high levels of vaccine uptake'.

    He said that after a first dose people acquire a high level of protection, and the JCVI therefore recommends delivery of the initial dose should be prioritised for both the Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines.

    He told a Downing Street data briefing: 'This will allow the greatest number of eligible people to receive vaccine in the shortest time possible and that will protect the greatest number of lives

    A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said: 'Everyone will still receive their second dose and this will be within 12 weeks of their first. The second dose completes the course and is important for longer term protection.' 

    This means that the vaccines can be deployed in a way that reaches as many people as possible as quickly as possible – with the emphasis on targeting the vulnerable groups first.

    Former PM Mr Blair welcomed that the government seemed to be following his blueprint of using the available stocks to give a single dose to as many people as possible.  

    'The trial results make the case for using all available vaccines to vaccinate people with the first dose, without holding back a second dose for each person, overwhelming,' he said. 

    'The first dose gives a high level of immunity – enough to halt hospital admissions – and the second dose is in any event at its most effective 2/3 months after the first, by which time we will have extra supplies of the vaccine to cover second doses.

    'In addition, the Government should consider urgently: acceleration of the vaccination programme. Of course, 1m vaccinations a week is remarkable by normal standards. 

    'But given the rates of transmission and the costs of lockdown, we need to do much more. Given the advantages of the AstraZeneca vaccine in terms of simplicity to administer – like the flu jab – we should surely be using every available potential resource including all pharmacies, occupational health capacity and those suitable to be trained fast to administer vaccines and increase the rate of vaccination.

    'And we should think about greater flexibility in the plan, with vaccination of groups most likely to transmit the virus and hotspot areas as well as age and vulnerability.'

    A dosing error, the death of a Brazilian doctor, and the trial being paused: The troubled path to getting Oxford's Covid jab approved in Britain (and how two professors behind the vaccine stand to make MILLIONS) 

    Britain today approved the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, paving the way for millions to receive the jab within weeks and offering hope that the UK could be 'out' of the coronavirus crisis by the spring.

    But it has been a troubled road to getting the vaccine over the line.

    Regulators were left with a dilemma after it emerged the jab was 62 per cent effective when given as two full doses, yet could prevent up to 90 per cent of infections when administered as a half dose followed by a full dose.

    Professor Sarah Gilbert,

    Leading the team is Sarah Gilbert, a British vaccinologist who is Professor of Vaccinology at Oxford University

    Adrian Hill is an Irish vaccinologist and director of the Jenner Institute - which develops vaccines and carries out clinical trials for diseases including Malaria, Tuberculosis and Ebola

    Adrian Hill is an Irish vaccinologist and director of the Jenner Institute - which develops vaccines and carries out clinical trials for diseases including Malaria, Tuberculosis and Ebola 

    The second dosing method, however, was based on a tiny sample size and included no-one over the age of 55 — who are most at risk from the virus.

    And the scientific trial of the jab was plunged into crisis mode in September after a volunteer suffered 'transverse myelitis' — swelling in the spine. Academics behind the study dismissed the side effect as being linked to the jab but conceded that they had to pause the research to investigate the matter.

    They were rocked again in October when Brazilian doctor and trial volunteer Dr João Pedro R. Feitosa, 28, died from Covid-19 after getting a jab, but it quickly emerged he was in the experimental group and did not get the Oxford vaccine.

    It comes after it was revealed Oxford University stands to make hundreds of millions of pounds if its coronavirus vaccine proved successful, after it secured a deal giving the institution six per cent of all profits.

    And Oxford professors Sarah Gilbert and Adrian Hill — who helped develop the jab — also stand to make millions after their company Vaccitech created the experimental jab alongside experts at the university's Jenner Institute.

    Companies House records show the experts own 10 per cent of the company, which was valued at £65.8million last year before the pandemic hit. It means the pair will be entitled to their share of revenue when the Covid-19 jab makes it to market.

    AstraZeneca has promised not to make money on the first three billion doses — but with booster shots and the spectre of further vaccines being needed in the future, they could stand to rake in hundreds of millions.

    The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) today approved the jab to be given as two doses between four to 12 weeks apart.

    The significant gap sparked hopes that millions more people could be vaccinated quicker, allowing the UK to exit the pandemic faster.

    Dr João Pedro R. Feitosa (pictured), a 28-year-old from Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, was confirmed to be the volunteer who died in the Brazilian arm of AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford's coronavirus vaccine trial

    Dr João Pedro R. Feitosa (pictured), a 28-year-old from Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, was confirmed to be the volunteer who died in the Brazilian arm of AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford's coronavirus vaccine trial

    They also approved the jab to be given as two full doses. It is thought they took this decision because there was 'too little' data available to approve it as a half dose followed by a full dose.

    The MHRA's chief executive Dr June Raine told a press conference today the higher effectiveness of the half dose was not 'borne out' in analysis.

    The dosing mix-up in the trials, which left regulators with a headache, happened because of a measurement blunder by Oxford University's researchers.

    In May, a quality check on a vaccine delivery from a manufacturer in Italy found the chemicals were more potent than ordered, according to an investigation by Reuters.

    The Italian firm, IRBM/Advent, insisted batch K.0011 contained the right concentration of vaccine after checking it using a genetic test known as quantitative PCR, which works out the amount of viral material per millilitre.

    But Oxford used a different type of test that estimates the amount of viral matter based on how much ultraviolet (UV) light the material absorbed.

    The university believed its method gave a more accurate measurement and so diluted the dose meaning it became a half dose batch.

    The error, detailed by documents published in journal The Lancet, happened as a product mixed with the solution before it is administered interfered with the UV test, leading to an overestimate of the batch strength.

    The mistake was only picked up in June, after Oxford scientists found those that received doses from batch K.0011 suffered less potent side-effects.

    With the blessing of the UK's drug regulator the MHRA, they pressed ahead with the trial and gave those volunteers – and all other volunteers – full doses for the rest of the study.

    An AstraZeneca boss said earlier this month the company would have run the trials differently if it had been in charge.

    Dr Mene Pangalos told BBC Panorama: 'There is no doubt I think that we would have run the study a little bit differently if we had been doing it from scratch.

    'But ultimately it is what it is and I think the Oxford group have done a fantastic job and then we've done as good a job as we possibly can to translate that into the data-set that we can provide to the regulators and to regions around the world for the approval.'

    Trials were also suspended on September 9 when a volunteer was rushed to hospital with inflammation in the spinal cord.

    After an assessment they were allowed to resume in the UK on September 12, but the US kept them paused for a further month.

    An internal safety report revealed the British patient was diagnosed with transverse myelitis, an inflammation of a section of the spinal cord.

    The condition damages the myelin sheath, an insulating barrier of fatty protein that protects the nerves, and interrupts messages sent by spinal cord nerves.

    This results in pain, weakness, abnormal sensations, and problems of the bladder and bowel - and can even lead to permanent paralysis.

    But according to documents obtained by the Wall Street Journal regulators ruled that the vaccine did not directly cause the neurological issue but that a link between it and the shot should not be ruled out.

    The death from Covid-19 of volunteer Dr Feitosa plunged the trials into further turmoil in October, after it was reported by Brazilian media.

    But newspaper Globo and news agency Bloomberg later revealed he was in the control group and had not received the Oxford vaccine, citing sources close to the trials.Some scientists have welcomed the decision, saying it will allow greater 'flexibility' in the vaccination programme. But pharmaceutical giant Pfizer said that it only assessed its vaccine on a two-dose regimen whereby people were given the jab three weeks apart.

    In a statement it said: 'Pfizer and BioNTech's phase three study for the Covid-19 vaccine was designed to evaluate the vaccine's safety and efficacy following a two-dose schedule, separated by 21 days.

    'The safety and efficacy of the vaccine has not been evaluated on different dosing schedules as the majority of trial participants received the second dose within the window specified in the study design.

    'Data from the phase three study demonstrated that, although partial protection from the vaccine appears to begin as early as 12 days after the first dose, two doses of the vaccine are required to provide the maximum protection against the disease, a vaccine efficacy of 95%.

    'There are no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose is sustained after 21 days.

    'While decisions on alternative dosing regimens reside with health authorities, Pfizer believes it is critical that health authorities conduct surveillance efforts on any alternative schedules implemented and to ensure each recipient is afforded the maximum possible protection, which means immunisation with two doses of the vaccine.'

    Commenting on the decision, Stephen Evans, professor of pharmacoepidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: 'The decision to allow both the currently UK authorised vaccines to be given with a greater delay between doses to maximise the numbers getting one dose as rapidly as possible is a sensible one.

    'It cannot have been an easy decision, since the evidence on the efficacy of one dose was more limited, but the crisis in the UK requires more than the usual regulatory approach.'

    Professor Robert Read, head of clinical and experimental sciences within medicine at the University of Southampton, added: 'JCVI has advised that whilst we should be prepared to give people the second dose, it is acceptable to give that within 12 weeks of the first dose. This allows some much-needed flexibility in a programme as big as this.'

    Ian Jones, professor of virology at the University of Reading, added: 'A level of immunity sufficient to prevent severe disease can be generated after only one inoculation of this vaccine so the revised JCVI advice to prioritise giving those at risk their first dose is a sensible idea.

    'It will allow more people in this group to be treated with initial supplies, reduce the threat of hospitalisation from Covid-19, and accelerate the return to normality.'

    Lawrence Young, professor of molecular oncology at Warwick Medical School, said: 'To maximise the number of at-risk groups receiving the vaccine, the first dose will be given to as many people as possible with the second dose being delayed for up to 12 weeks. This will allow the 100 million vaccine doses ordered by the UK Government to be rolled out to as many people as possible starting as soon as next week.'

    Mr Hancock will announce the changes to Tiers in the Commons later with insiders questioning whether the vaccine news has been released as a precursor for stricter lockdown restrictions.

    Yesterday's infection tally of 51,135 is the highest toll officially recorded by the Department of Health in a single 24-hour period and it marks a sharp 44 per cent rise on last Tuesday's figure of 36,804. 

    Reacting to Oxford's approval today, a Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said: 'The Government has today accepted the recommendation from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) to authorise Oxford University/AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine for use.

    'This follows rigorous clinical trials and a thorough analysis of the data by experts at the MHRA, which has concluded that the vaccine has met its strict standards of safety, quality and effectiveness.'   

    In a statement, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: 'This is a moment to celebrate British innovation - not only are we responsible for discovering the first treatment to reduce mortality for Covid-19, this vaccine will be made available to some of the poorest regions of the world at a low cost, helping protect countless people from this awful disease.

    'It is a tribute to the incredible UK scientists at Oxford University and AstraZeneca whose breakthrough will help to save lives around the world. I want to thank every single person who has been part of this British success story. While it is a time to be hopeful, it is so vital everyone continues to play their part to drive down infections.'

    And Professor Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group and chief investigator of the Oxford trial, said: 'The regulator's assessment that this is a safe and effective vaccine is a landmark moment, and an endorsement of the huge effort from a devoted international team of researchers and our dedicated trial participants.

    'Though this is just the beginning, we will start to get ahead of the pandemic, protect health and economies when the vulnerable are vaccinated everywhere, as many as possible as soon possible.'

    Data published in The Lancet medical journal in early December showed the vaccine was 62% effective in preventing Covid-19 among a group of 4,440 people given two standard doses of the vaccine when compared with 4,455 people given a placebo drug.

    Of 1,367 people given a half first dose of the vaccine followed by a full second dose, there was 90% protection against Covid-19 when compared with a control group of 1,374 people.

    The overall Lancet data, which was peer-reviewed, set out full results from clinical trials of more than 20,000 people.

    Among the people given the placebo drug, 10 were admitted to hospital with coronavirus, including two with severe Covid which resulted in one death. But among those receiving the vaccine, there were no hospital admissions or severe cases.

    The half dose followed by a full dose regime came about as a result of an accidental dosing error.

    However, the MHRA was made aware of what happened and clinical trials for the vaccine were allowed to continue. 

    In an interview with the Sunday Times, AstraZeneca chief executive Pascal Soriot suggested that further data submitted to the regulator showed the vaccine could match the 95% efficacy achieved by the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.

    'We think we have figured out the winning formula and how to get efficacy that, after two doses, is up there with everybody else,' he said.

    On Monday, Calum Semple, professor of outbreak medicine at the University of Liverpool and a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), described the vaccine as a 'game changer' but said it would take until summer to vaccinate enough people for herd immunity - when the virus struggles to circulate.

    'To get the wider community herd immunity from vaccination rather than through natural infection will take probably 70% to 80% of the population to be vaccinated, and that, I'm afraid, is going to take us right into the summer, I expect,' he said. 

    It comes ahead of a shake-up of the tiered system in England this afternoon. Prime Minister Boris Johnson chaired a meeting of the Government's Covid-19 Operations committee last night, when the need for changes to the tier system were agreed. Health Secretary Matt Hancock is expected to share the specifics with MPs later today.

    Areas that may be moved from Tier 3 to Tier 4 due to increasing case rates include parts of the East Midlands, such as Northamptonshire and Leicestershire, as well as all areas of the West Midlands metropolitan county. 

    Hartlepool in north-east England, along with a handful of areas in Lancashire - Blackburn with Darwen, Burnley, Pendle and Ribble Valley - could also be upgraded from Tier 3 to 4.

    The Times also reported that ministers are also considering imposing the country's toughest measures on parts of the south west and Cumbria.

    Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, warned 'options were narrowing' and that moving areas into the highest tier was necessary.

    'Pressures on the NHS in some parts of the country are rising at an unsustainable rate. Thankfully, trusts in other areas have been helping out. But with the virus spreading fast alongside mounting winter pressures, the options are narrowing.

    'We urgently need to get ahead of the outbreak. The Covid-19 tier review offers an opportunity to do that. It will require difficult decisions, moving millions more people to the highest level.

    'The Government must act with boldness, speed and clarity in curbing the threat of Covid-19.' 

    Figures from NHS England showed there were 21,787 patients in NHS hospitals in England as of 8am on Tuesday, compared with 20,426 on Monday, and 18,974 at the first wave peak on April 12.

    Five of the seven NHS regions in England are currently reporting a record number of Covid-19 hospital patients: Eastern England, London, the Midlands, south-east England and south-west England.

    The other two regions, north-east and north-west England, remain below peak levels that were set in mid-November.

    Meanwhile the number of further lab-confirmed cases recorded in a single day in the UK hit a new record on Tuesday, rising above 50,000 for the first time, to 53,135.

    But officials can't be sure if this is Britain's worst day of the pandemic so far because mass testing was only introduced in the UK in May, but it has been estimated there may have been as many 100,000 cases a day at the peak in late March and early April.

    Public Health England bosses admitted 'some' cases announced yesterday will be the result of a reporting delay over Christmas but warned the figure was mostly the 'reflection of a real increase'. Data shows around 40,000 of Tuesday's cases come from samples taken in England on or after Boxing Day. 

    The Government said a further 414 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Tuesday, bringing the UK total to 71,567. 

    Yesterday's 414 deaths are 40 per cent lower than the 691 recorded on the same day last week. However, it can take infected patients several weeks to fall ill, meaning the daily death tolls will inevitably spike in the next fortnight.      

    More than six million people in east and south-east England went into the highest level of restrictions on Saturday, meaning 24 million - 43% of the population - are now affected.  

    Department of Health statistics show 18,227 Covid-infected patients were being cared for in hospitals across the nation on Christmas Eve - a 15 per cent rise in a week. Top officials say the highly infectious strain spreading rapidly across the country is to blame. For comparison, April 12 was the busiest day of the pandemic so far for hospitals in England, when 18,974 patients were occupying beds

    Department of Health statistics show 18,227 Covid-infected patients were being cared for in hospitals across the nation on Christmas Eve - a 15 per cent rise in a week. Top officials say the highly infectious strain spreading rapidly across the country is to blame. For comparison, April 12 was the busiest day of the pandemic so far for hospitals in England, when 18,974 patients were occupying beds

    Another 13MILLION people could be plunged to Tier 4 TODAY despite vaccine breakthrough: Swathes of Cumbria, Lancashire and Midlands face toughest curbs at 3pm as Matt Hancock vows 'further action' against surging Covid cases

    Another 13million people could be ordered into brutal Tier 4 lockdown today as Matt Hancock vowed 'further action' to tackle surging coronavirus cases - despite a dramatic vaccine breakthrough. 

    The Health Secretary is set to announce the draconian squeeze is being tightened across more of England, with swathes of Cumbria, Lancashire and the Midlands looking most likely to be upgraded.

    He gave a grim signal about the direction of travel this morning, even though he tried to soften the blow by claiming regulatory approval for the Oxford/University AstraZeneca jab means the crisis will be 'over' by Spring.

    Even if the government manages to crank up vaccinations to two million doses a week, it will still take months to cover enough of the population to ease restrictions safely. 

    Pointing to rapidly increasing infections thought to be driven by the mutant Covid, Mr Hancock said in a round of interviews: 'It is going to be a difficult few weeks ahead... We are going to have to take further action.'

    He also revealed that Education Secretary Gavin Williamson will announce changes to the plans for schools to return in January later, with secondaries expected to keep classrooms closed for longer while testing systems are put in place.  

    More than two-thirds of England — approximately 37million people — could be under Tier 4 curbs following the latest review of the system, which will be announced in the Commons this afternoon. Speculation is also growing about a 'Tier 5' crackdown, that could include even harsher measures such as a curfew, although Mr Hancock made clear that would not come today. 

    Some 24million people, including London, much of the South and the East are already under the strictest stay-at-home orders. 

    Department of Health data shows parts of Cumbria could be next, with the county's borough of Eden having an infection rate worse than dozens of boroughs already in Tier Four — and one of the quickest-growing outbreaks in the country.

    Pressure has mounted on the Government to act as hospitals across England warned of increasing strains on services due to Covid-19 patient numbers, which have reached their highest levels during the pandemic, while a record daily high of 51,135 further cases were reported on Tuesday, along with 414 deaths.  

1 comment:

  1. With the Tier 4- The Elite/Dark side is into something diabolical.
    God help us!

    ReplyDelete

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