Nearly
20,000 second doses of Pfizer vaccine given in England before rule
change
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[January 07, 2021]
LONDON (Reuters) - Nearly 20,000 second
doses of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech were
given to people in England before guidelines were changed to prioritise
giving out first doses, the National Health Service said on Thursday.
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The figures showed that 19,981 second vaccinations were given
between the Dec. 29 and Jan. 3, out of 1.1 million total
administered in England. Across the whole of the United Kingdom, 1.3
million doses have been deployed.
The day after second vaccinations began, health officials said they
would prioritise giving as many people as possible a first shot of a
COVID-19 vaccine to offer some protection over the rollout of
booster shots.
That means second shots will now be given up to 12 weeks after
people receive their first shots, prompting criticism from some
scientists, and frustration from people who have seen appointments
cancelled.
While AstraZeneca's shot was tested with different intervals between
doses, Pfizer has said there is no data to demonstrate the efficacy
of its first dose after 21 days.
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On Tuesday, England's Chief
Medical Officer said that the balance of risk
supported the move, adding protection from a
single dose would likely be more than 50% even
if it did pose a small risk of an "escape
mutant" of the coronavirus.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson hopes that by
giving at least some protection to more than 13
million people in priority groups over the next
six weeks, it will be possible to consider
easing strict lockdown measures from
mid-February.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; editing by Michael
Holden)
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