Coronavirus vaccine: 137,000 people in UK get COVID jab in first week

Authored by news.sky.com and submitted by sosurrey
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More than 137,000 people have received a coronavirus vaccine in the UK, it has been announced.

Nadhim Zahawi, the minister responsible for the jab's deployment, tweeted that it was a "really good start".

In seven days, he said the number of doses administered were:

Live COVID-19 updates from the UK and around the world

Mr Zahawi confirmed there had been 137,897 vaccinations given across the UK so far.

"That number will increase as we have operationalised hundreds of PCN (primary care networks)," he added - referencing the rollout due to begin in GPs' surgeries and the promise it will follow in care homes before Christmas.

The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine being administered needs a second jab several weeks later for full effectiveness.

The government has faced calls to be more open about the data when it comes to coronavirus vaccinations - for example, by publishing how many have been given and where on a daily basis, like it does with cases and deaths.

Ministers said it was taking time to collate all the information and verify its accuracy.

Image: Margaret Keenan, 90, was the first person to get the Pfizer vaccine outside medical trials

Wednesday's announcement is the first time specific numbers have been revealed - instead of the assurance that "tens of thousands" of jabs have been administered - and the government has now said it will publish the latest figures weekly.

The majority of the vaccines administered so far have gone to the over-80s, care home workers and NHS staff at more than 70 sites across the country.

Patients require two doses - 21 days apart - for the jab to be fully effective.

The first person in Britain to get a coronavirus jab outside a clinical trial was 90-year-old Margaret Keenan.

The grandmother-of-four received it at Coventry's University Hospital at 6.31am last Tuesday.

Since then, many others have had the vaccine, including the second patient and first man to receive it in Britain, William Shakespeare, and celebrity chef Prue Leith.

A priority list determines the order for getting the jab and is based mostly on age and increased risk of suffering serious illness from the virus.

1 - Residents in a care home for older adults and their carers

2 - All those aged 80 and over, as well as frontline health and social care workers

3 - All those aged 75 and over

4 - All those aged 70 and over, as well as clinically extremely vulnerable individuals

5 - All those aged 65 and over

6 - All individuals aged 16-64 with underlying health conditions which put them at higher risk of serious disease and mortality

7 - All those aged 60 and over

8 - All those aged 55 and over

9 - All those aged 50 and over

Two groups will not receive the vaccine:

yoshhash on December 16th, 2020 at 16:35 UTC »

worldometers needs to add a new column showing how many new daily vaccinations were done by each country. Would make a hell of a graph, maybe useful to show antivaxxers.

Jeramus on December 16th, 2020 at 15:36 UTC »

Partially vaccinated. We need to emphasize the two doses necessary so people don't skip the second shot.

boomwakr on December 16th, 2020 at 10:17 UTC »

Oh damn that's a hell of a lot more than I was expecting