Boris Johnson reveals seven Covid vaccination centres will open across England next week
Boris Johnson reveals seven Covid vaccination centres will open across England next week – with London’s Nightingale hospital one of the make-shift inoculation hubs
- Hubs are in every region of England, except Yorkshire, and will dish out jabs
- Boris Johnson unveiled them today in another push to turbo-charge the roll out
- The Government is aiming to inoculate 13.2million Britons by mid-February
Boris Johnson has revealed seven mass coronavirus vaccination centres will throw open their doors next week to turbo-charge efforts to pull the country out of a seemingly endless cycle of lockdowns and ruinous curbs on daily life.
The hubs will be based in venues including sports centres and London’s ExCeL convention centre, and equipped to administer thousands every week.
There will be one in every region of England, except Yorkshire and the East Midlands, to be operated by NHS staff and volunteers.
Stunning pictures showed the capital’s Nightingale hospital in the ExCeL centre had been stripped bare while its corridors stood empty last week as the capital’s hospitals were bursting at the seams with patients.
MailOnline also revealed last week the emergency facility will be cut to 300 beds, a mere fraction of the 4,000 it had when it first opened.
The Government is aiming to vaccinate 13.2million care home residents, frontline health workers and ‘vulnerable’ Britons by mid-February, in a desperate bid to drive down fatalities from the virus.
But experts have warned they will need to ramp up the roll out in order to hit the ambitious target.
Pharmacists have today called for them to also be used to dish out the Covid-19 vaccine, and called on the NHS to use its ‘invisible army’.
It comes as daily deaths from the virus went above 1,000 for the first time since April, and health chiefs report another record-high 62,322 new infections.
Above are the locations of the seven mass vaccination centres that will begin operating from next week. They were revealed today by the Prime Minister
London’s ExCeL Centre, left, and Epsom racecourse in Surrey, right, will both be used as mass vaccination centres, the Prime Minister has said
The Ashton Gate Stadium, Bristol, will also be used to administer the Covid-19 vaccine
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman announced the mass vaccination centres had been set up in the country.
The Etihad Tennis Centre, Manchester, and Epsom Racecourse, Surrey, are both to be used for giving out vaccines, alongside Robertson House, Stevenage, the Centre for Life, Newcastle, the Ashton Gate Stadium, Bristol, and Birmingham’s Millenium Point.
The Press Association news agency reported five other locations are also being considered as vaccine hubs.
These were the Derby Arena, Black Country Living Museum, Dudley, Malvern’s Three Counties Showground, Worcestershire, Villa Park the home of Aston Villa FC, and Leicester Racecourse.
It comes after supermarket chain Morrisons confirmed that car parks at three stores in Yeovil, Wakefiled and Winsford would host drive-through vaccinations from Monday, with a further 47 offered to the Government.
Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur have also offered the use of their stadium to the NHS as a venue to roll out the coronavirus vaccine.
Other venues in London have offered their services to support the rollout, such as the Royal Vauxhall Tavern and G-A-Y.
Jeremy Joseph, owner of G-A-Y, has offered up all of his venues for the vaccinations, including the club Heaven in Charing Cross, which has a capacity of 1,625.
The venue is licensed for 24 hours, so he said it could offer around-the-clock vaccinations.
James Lindsay, CEO of the Royal Vauxhall Tavern, told the PA news agency he wanted to play his part in the fight against the virus.
Above are pictures from inside the ExCeL Centre last month. They show tables and chairs laid out, possibly in preparation for the roll out of the vaccine
London’s Nightingale Centre is expected to start admitting recovering emergency care patients who have tested negative for coronavirus in the coming days, but will not have all its 300 beds available until next month.
A spokesman for NHS England did not deny they had significantly cut the number of beds, and said the number would be determined ‘by the demand and availability of staff’.
The seven Nightingales were left largely unused during the first wave despite £220million of taxpayers’ money being pumped into them, as hospitals struggled to spare the needed doctors and nurses to man their wards. Just 57 Covid-19 patients were admitted to London’s Nightingale, Department of Health figures show.
The NHS also admitted the emergency facility would be used for non-Covid patients, despite millions being poured into equipping it with ventilators during the first wave for those suffering the worst effects of the virus.
‘It will provide rehabilitation for people who are recovering after an emergency hospital stay and who are not Covid positive, freeing up other beds in hospital for Covid-19 patients,’ they said.
The Nightingale in the capital was built to much fan-fare during the first wave of the pandemic, with Health Secretary Matt Hancock heralding it a ‘remarkable feat in these challenging times’.
But it was left idling for months after barely a month in use, before the order to start stripping the hospital was given – as clearly shown by shocking photos from inside it last month revealing empty wards.
Frantic efforts were then launched to re-construct a ‘scaled-down’ version of the mothballed hospital, sources said, at further expense to the public purse.