Old and vulnerable people ‘AREN’T getting their Covid jabs’

UK ‘faces vaccine chaos’: Doctors warn jab rollout could turn into shambles like PPE fiasco with hundreds of GP surgeries still waiting for Pfizer jabs and elderly patients facing last-minute cancellations

  • At one health centre in South London 75 doses of the vaccine were left over 
  • The Pfizer vaccine must be used within five days of being thawed to work 
  • Elderly people may be struggling with transport or are nervous to go out

Doctors, MPs and care chiefs have warned the Government that its vaccine programme could turn into a ‘shambles like the PPE fiasco’ if current issues with the rollout are not fixed.

Hundreds of GP surgeries and hospitals are still waiting to receive doses of the Pfizer vaccine, while doctors warn they are having to cancel jab appointments for the elderly due to the hold-up. 

Meanwhile, only seven areas of England have so far received the vaccine, meaning just 3,000 of the country’s 15,000 care homes can currently access the jab.

Yesterday MPs urged ministers not to repeat the PPE ‘shambles’, according to the Sunday Mirror, while the British Medical Association told the paper that distribution issues ‘must be resolved as a matter of urgency’.

Concerns are growing that some older and vulnerable people are not taking up the Pfizer vaccine

Concerns are growing that some older and vulnerable people are not taking up the Pfizer vaccine

Concerns are growing that some older and vulnerable people are not taking up the Pfizer vaccine

The warning comes amid growing concern that some older and vulnerable people in the areas where the jabs have so far been rolled-out are not taking up the Pfizer vaccine. 

At one health centre in South London, The Mail on Sunday learned that 75 doses of the vaccine were left over as uptake had been so low.  

However there is a flash of hope that Britain could be free of tight Covid restrictions by the end of February. 

Ministers have now pinpointed the 15 million people who would need vaccinations to end the cycles of crippling lockdowns. 

With the ‘game-changing’ Oxford jab expected to be approved within days, the Government hopes that enough doses will soon be available to inoculate those most vulnerable to within weeks.

Last night the Government came under fire from experts who warned about the speed of the vaccine roll-out.

So far, as of Christmas Eve, 616,933 people in the UK had been given their first dose of the Pfizer vaccine.

But, according to the Sunday Mirror, around half of England’s 135 trusts are still waiting for the jab, along with hundreds of surgeries.

Meanwhile, in one area of Warwickshire, where 3,500 over 80s are on the list for vaccinations, only 975 vaccines were delivered last week, the paper reports. 

Regional chair of the BMA, Dr Gary Marlowe, hit out at the Government, saying it does ‘not seem to be world-beating at logistics’.

The Government has also come under fire from care chiefs, who have accused them of ‘failing to make homes a safe haven’.  

Meanwhile, concerns are growing that some older and vulnerable people are not taking up the Pfizer vaccine.

In one health centre in South London, managers were left scrambling to find other patients to vaccinate and even offered a jab to healthy volunteers working there.

The Pfizer vaccine must be used within five days of being thawed or it offers no protection. Experts suggested that elderly people may be struggling with transport or are nervous about venturing outdoors. 

Caroline Abrahams at Age UK, said: ‘Simply getting to and from hospital is a huge challenge for a lot of older people.’

The Pfizer vaccine must be used within five days of being thawed or it offers no protection

The Pfizer vaccine must be used within five days of being thawed or it offers no protection

The Pfizer vaccine must be used within five days of being thawed or it offers no protection

But an NHS spokesman insisted: ‘Uptake has been strong so far.’

The fears follow reports that care home residents have yet to receive the vaccine in large numbers despite being classed as high priority. 

The Times reported Whitehall figures which suggested people in care only accounted for 0.3 per cent of the first 613,000 people who have received the jab.  

Today a Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson told MailOnline: ‘In line with advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), vaccines have been administered to care home residents, those aged 80 and over and health and social care staff through over 500 vaccination sites across the UK.

‘The vaccine roll out in care homes in England began on Wednesday 16 December, with hundreds of residents vaccinated across care homes in Slough, Aintree, Herne Bay, Thanet, Chalfont St Peter, Droitwich and Cheltenham, as well as Chelsea Pensioners.

‘We are working hard to vaccinate all care home residents and workers as quickly and safely as possible.’

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