It's the usual p*ss up in a brewery...3 Dec 2020 11:04
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"NHS staff are no longer the top priority for receiving the first covid-19 vaccine, and most are now unlikely to get the jab before Christmas, HSJ has learned.
Several senior sources have told HSJ that people aged over 80 who are at hospitals for other reasons will now be the top priority for the first batches to arrive of the Pfizer/Biontech vaccine, which are due to arrive in coming days. They will be followed in the priority order by care home staff.
NHS staff will be the next priority to receive the vaccine, but limited stocks are expected to mean most of them will now not receive it until after Christmas.
In recent days, NHS plans had assumed NHS staff would receive this vaccine, known by the codename “courageous”. This is because it is only being sent to 50 “hub hospital” sites, due to the logistical challenges of correctly storing, handling and transferring it, most of which must be done at very low temperatures.
The 50 “hospital hubs” were therefore told the first to get it would mostly be NHS hospital staff, as HSJ revealed last week, and had been planning on that basis until last night.
However, yesterday the NHS was effectively overruled on this, when the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation and government said over 80s and care home staff must be prioritised despite the logistical challenges.
Some NHS staff will still be vaccinated from next week — for example where trusts have spare vaccine and can’t achieve giving it to more care staff or over-80s, because of logistics or potentially lack of demand — but the numbers are now expected to be strictly limited.
Care home residents — despite being top of the JCVI’s list — will still not be among the first to get it, because the logistics of getting it to them have not been overcome, under the NHS’ current plans. The government and NHS have said that they will begin vaccinating care residents as soon as they think it is possible.
Earlier planning, before it became clear that Pfizer/Biontech’s vaccine would be the first to arrive, had assumed over 80s and care home staff would be prioritised, as per JCVI recommendations, but that this first work would be led by primary care, which would take it to care homes. This will now become much easier, and will begin on mass, when the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca is approved and delivered.
Senior local staff involved in the early vaccination campaign were told of the new plans on a call last night.
HSJ understands NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens told local NHS leaders on the call that “the baton has been passed from the scientists to the NHS”, and said the NHS is now “ready to deliver”.