Single dose of Covid vaccine cuts risk of hospital admission in elderly by 80%, new figures show
A senior World Health Organisation official has warned it would be “premature” and “unrealistic” to think the coronavirus pandemic might be over by the end of 2021.
Dr Michael Ryan, director of WHO’s emergencies programme, said the arrival of effective vaccinations could at least help dramatically reduce hospitalisations and death by the end of the year.
But he warned against complacency, saying nothing was guaranteed in an evolving epidemic.
France will begin allowing some over-65s to receive the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid jab after initially restricting its use to the country’s younger population.
While France first authorised the vaccine only for medical professionals under 65, health minister Olivier Veran announced it will soon be available to people over age 50 with health problems that make them vulnerable to Covid-19.
The minister added that people who have had the virus in recent months will only need one injection of the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
Secondary school reopenings likely to be ‘staggered’
Secondary school reopenings are likely to be “staggered” as pupils retake Covid-19 tests before returning to the classroom, Geoff Barton, from the Association of School and College Leaders, has said.
He told BBC Breakfast that for primaries it will likely feel “pretty normal” from next week.
On secondary schools and further education, he added: “I think for secondaries you’ve got the issue of the testing, which means there is inevitably going to be a bit of a staggered start because those young people won’t be able to go into their classroom until the first of those tests has been done.
“Over the first two weeks they need three of those tests and then the responsibility moves back to the home.”
Mr Barton added: “If we see next week for secondary and further education young people as a transitional week of starting to bring them back into school, starting to teach them how the testing works, the week after that, starting the 15th, is going to look as normal as it might do.”
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 08:42
Business secretary plays down suggestions Britain could host additional Euro matches
Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng has played down suggestions Britain could host additional Euro 2020 matches this summer as the coronavirus vaccine drives down infections.
The tournament is due to be hosted across 12 different countries, with the semi-finals and final to be played at Wembley, although Uefa is reported to be looking at other options in the light of continuing coronavirus restrictions.
However, despite the success of the vaccine rollout, Mr Kwarteng played down suggestions Wembley could take more games.
“It is March 2 now. I don’t want to run ahead of ourselves,” he told Sky News.
“The information is very encouraging, the vaccine rollout has been very successful. I don’t want to over-egg it. I don’t want to say we are completely free of coronavirus. There are still dangers ahead.
“The numbers are encouraging but I don’t think it would be right for me to speculate about football tournaments in two or three months’ time.”
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 08:27
World yet to see ‘full extent of coronavirus evolutions’
The world has yet to see “the full extent of the evolution” of coronavirus as it continues to adapt to humans, the head of the UK’s genetic surveillance programme has said.
Professor Sharon Peacock told The Independent that the dominance of the new and emerging variants, including the UK, South African and Brazilian versions, suggests the virus is approaching “a fitness peak”.
Samuel Lovett has this exclusive report:
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 08:10
France to offer Oxford/AstraZeneca jab to some over-65s
France will start allowing some people over 65 to receive the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine, after initially restricting its use to younger populations because of limited data on the drug’s effectiveness.
While France first authorised the vaccine only for medical professionals under 65, health minister Olivier Veran said it will soon be available to people over age 50 with health problems that make them vulnerable to Covid-19.
Mr Veran also said people who have had the virus in recent months will only need one injection of the two-dose Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
France’s High Authority for Health has argued that recent infection acts as partial protection against the virus, so a second dose is not essential.
France had used less than a quarter of the 1.1 million AstraZeneca vaccines it received as of Friday, according to government data.
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 08:02
‘Unrealistic’ to think Covid crisis will be over by end of 2021
A senior World Health Organisation (WHO) official has said it would be “premature” and “unrealistic” to think the pandemic might be over by the end of 2021.
Dr Michael Ryan, director of WHO’s emergencies programme, said the arrival of effective vaccinations could at least help dramatically reduce hospitalisations and death by the end of the year.
But he warned against complacency, saying nothing was guaranteed in an evolving epidemic.
The world’s singular focus right now should be to keep transmission of Covid-19 as low as possible, he added.
“If we’re smart, we can finish with the hospitalisations and the deaths and the tragedy associated with this pandemic” by the end of the year, he told a press conference in Geneva.
“If the vaccines begin to impact not only on death and not only on hospitalisation, but have a significant impact on transmission dynamics and transmission risk, then I believe we will accelerate toward controlling this pandemic.”
But he added: “Right now the virus is very much in control,” he said.
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 08:00
Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. Follow for rolling updates and statistics throughout the day.
Chiara Giordano2 March 2021 07:55