To continue reading this article, subscribe to the Stray Ferret for as little as £1 a week
Already a subscriber? Log in here.
28
Apr 2021
People hoping to receive a first dose of the coronavirus vaccine in the Harrogate district may have to wait until June, a letter leaked to the Stray Ferret has revealed.
The Harrogate district had made good progress with the vaccination programme. According to the latest NHS England figures, more than 95,000 jabs have been given.
But as the national rollout focuses on people aged just over 40, it seems the NHS has cut vaccine supply to the Humber, Coast and Vale Integrated Care System, which oversees the vaccine programme in the Harrogate district.
A letter signed by Amanda Bloor, accountable officer for North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group, and Beverley Geary, chief nurse at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, and leaked to the Stray Ferret, revealed the supply problem. The letter says:
The letter, dated April 22, was sent to senior health officials in the region as well as large scale vaccination sites and community pharmacies.
It says Humber, Coast and Vale ICS is "extremely concerned about the proposed national campaign for the vaccination programme due to start next week", when the focus is likely to be on over 40s.
Ms Bloor told a North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum press briefing today that first dose supply was “getting low." She added:
0