Vaccinating
everyone on the planet against Covid-19 regularly is not sustainable or
affordable, a UK vaccine scientist has said.
Prof Sir
Andrew Pollard, who helped develop the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, said the
most at risk should be identified and prioritized instead.
He said the
vaccine rollout had gone "extremely well" in the UK but other parts
of the world were falling behind.
Booster jabs
have been offered to all eligible adults in the UK.
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There has
been a surge of Omicron cases in the UK, with a record 218,724 cases reported
on Tuesday.
However,
this figure includes a backlog of two days’ worth of cases from Wales and four
days of cases from Northern Ireland, due to the holiday weekend.
But Prime
Minister Boris Johnson's spokesman said the government "doesn't see any
data to suggest that further restrictions would be the right approach" in
England.
He said the
public should be "in no doubt" it would be a difficult time for the
NHS but there were mitigations in place to help them through a
"challenging winter" many business listings.
A number
of hospital trusts have declared critical incidents, with coronavirus
cases leading to staff shortages and increased pressure on services.
Plan B
measures currently in place - including mask-wearing in some indoor
settings and guidance to work from home where possible - are "the correct
course", the spokesman added.
Health
Secretary Sajid Javid said the government was not looking at cutting the
self-isolation period for those who test positive to five days.
Speaking
after visiting a vaccination centre in south London, he said the current
rules allowing people to leave their 10 days isolation early if they test
negative on days six and seven was the "right, balanced, proportionate
approach".
The prime
minister will host a Downing Street news conference later. He will be joined by
a chief medical officer for England Prof Sir Chris Whitty and chief scientific
adviser Sir Patrick Valance business listings.
New variants
may change the view
Prof Pollard
told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It really is not affordable,
sustainable or probably even needed to vaccinate everyone on the planet every
four to six months.
"We
haven't even managed to vaccinate everyone in Africa with one dose so we're
certainly not going to get to a point where fourth doses for everyone are
manageable."
There is no
"full certainty" on whether another booster might be needed in the
UK, added Prof Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group.
He said the
UK would be in a good position if variants continued to lead to milder disease,
as has been the case with Omicron.
"We may
well need to have boosters for the vulnerable in the population but I think
it's highly unlikely that we'll have programmers going forwards regularly of
boosting everyone over the age of 12," he added.
Prof Pollard
said those who would need further boosters were likely to be older adults or
those with health conditions.
"There
will be new variants after Omicron," he added. "We don't yet know how
they're going to behave - and that may completely change the view on what the
right thing to do is."
Prof Pollard
is chair of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), which
advises the government on vaccines, but he has no involvement in
decision-making on Covid-19 vaccinations in the UK free business listings.
Maggie
Throup, minister for vaccines and public health, told the BBC the government
would take advice from the JCVI about a fourth Covid vaccine dose programme and
then "decide whether it's appropriate".
She said it
was important for people to have their boosters now or first or second doses if
they had not yet done so.
Infectious
disease expert Prof Neil Ferguson said he was "cautiously optimistic"
that Covid cases were starting to plateau in London in the 18-50 age group,
which had been seeing especially high numbers.
The
epidemiologist said case numbers should start to fall in the next week in the
English capital, and in other regions from a week to three weeks' time.
He also said current case data was not giving the full picture, with test kits in short supply over Christmas and re-infections not being counted in the official figures - some 10-15% of Omicron cases are re-infections, he added.
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