UK announces COVID booster shot plan for older, vulnerable groups
Government unveils plans to rely on vaccines to contain the spread of the virus rather than impose further lockdowns.
The United Kingdom has announced a COVID-19 vaccine booster programme for older and more vulnerable people soon as Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government relies on vaccines rather than further lockdowns to navigate a “bumpy” winter.
“We’re now motoring ahead with the booster programme … so that’s going to mean we’re going to be building even higher walls of immunisation of vaccine protection in this country,” Johnson told a news conference on Tuesday.
“When you’ve got a large proportion of the country, as we have now, with immunity, then smaller changes can make a bigger difference, and give us the confidence that we don’t need to go back to the lockdowns of the past.”
Johnson scrapped the last coronavirus restrictions in England in July with the aim of a “return to normal”.
Officials said COVID-19 vaccines had saved more than 112,000 lives and averted 24 million infections as they proposed a third shot for front-line health workers and those aged over 50 or clinically vulnerable, starting with people most at risk.
Johnson hopes the booster programme, which is being undertaken without firm evidence about its likely effect, will mean that hospitals can bear the burden of infections during the UK’s winter season without the need for another lockdown.
The UK prime minister also outlined a “Plan B”, involving mandatory vaccine certificates in some settings, mandatory mask wearing, and asking people to work from home, which was being held in reserve.
The UK has recorded 134,000 COVID-19 deaths among its 67 million people.
Health Minister Sajid Javid said the booster programme would start next week and he expected vaccinations for health workers to become compulsory.
The four regions of the UK will all pursue a booster campaign as recommended by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI).
The JCVI proposed the booster be given six months after a second shot, after evidence of a small decline in vaccine effectiveness against hospitalisation in older people from a little more than 90 percent to a little less than 90 percent across five to six months.
‘Not past the pandemic’
Officials said protection from two doses of vaccine beyond six months was uncertain and that boosters would prevent illness and deaths from COVID-19, but did not say whether the extra shots would lower transmission rates.
“We’re not past the pandemic. We know this winter could quite possibly be bumpy at times … It’s better to be preemptive and to be prepared and plan for the worst,” England’s Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-Tam told reporters.
The head of the UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), June Raine, said the Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca vaccines could all be used in the booster programme.
Preference was given to Pfizer and Moderna, the latter of which will be given as a half dose. The jabs can be administered at the same time as flu vaccines, she added.
So far 44 million people have had two vaccine doses, 81 percent of those aged over 16. On Monday, the government said those aged 12 to 15 would also be offered shots.
The UK is currently recording the second-highest number of new infections after the United States, which also plans booster shots.
The British recommendation comes after some leading scientists, including from the US Food and Drug Administration and World Health Organization, wrote in Monday’s Lancet medical journal that COVID boosters were not yet needed.