Several clinics due to vaccinate people against flu in the Harrogate district have been cancelled or postponed.
One of the biggest providers of flu vaccines to the UK, Seqirus, confirmed delays in supplying the vaccines of up to two weeks due to “road freight delays” and “unexpected logistical challenges including transportation difficulties”.
This has disrupted some Harrogate GP surgeries scheduled flu vaccine clinics.
Patients have been advised they do not need to contact their surgeries, as their GP practice will be in touch with those affected.
The Stray Ferret has learned of the following changes. Other local surgeries may be affected.
- All appointments at a Ripon racecourse flu clinic on September 10 to 12 have been postponed by three weeks. Patients from a number of practices including Ripon Spa Surgery, North House Surgery, and Dr Ingram & Partners are affected.
- Church Avenue Medical Centre in Harrogate has contacted some patients to reschedule their appointments, but is awaiting new delivery dates from Seqirus before confirming new appointments.
- The Spa Surgery at Mowbray Square Medical Centre in Harrogate has also cancelled all appointments at its September 19 clinic. An update on the surgery’s Facebook page says the team will be in touch with patients when they can reschedule.
- Harrogate’s East Parade Surgery updated its website to say it will contact patients if their appointment has been affected, and to reschedule once stock is delivered.

The Spa Surgery took to Facebook to explain why vaccinations were delayed.
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The delay comes just days after routine blood tests were rearranged due to supply issues with blood test tubes.
Dr Gary Howsam, vice chair of the Royal College of GPs, which is the professional membership body for GPs in the UK, said:
“This is news we really didn’t want to hear. With over 36 million people eligible for the flu vaccine on the NHS this year, GPs need the supply chain to run like clockwork.
“Practices plan meticulously each year to deliver the flu vaccination programme on a mass scale and it is essential that as many people as possible in at-risk groups get their vaccination as early into the flu season as possible.
“A delay of even a couple of weeks is going to have a big impact on practices and their patients, especially when GPs are already dealing with the fallout caused by the shortage of blood test bottles and the anxiety this is causing.”
A Seqirus spokeswoman said:
“Vaccine supplies are now beginning to flow out across England and Wales this week and some practices and pharmacies will be able to begin their vaccination campaigns. We are working through various logistical issues and do not expect delays to extend beyond one to two weeks.”
Has your flu vaccination been postponed? Email us at contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Harrogate GP surgery postpones non-urgent blood tests as supply crisis deepensA Harrogate GP surgery has warned it will have to postpone non-urgent blood tests as the national blood supply crisis affects the district.
The Spa Surgery has said it will contact patients to rearrange routine blood tests but said urgent blood tests will continue as normal. Other local GP practices are also believed to be affected.
The surgery, which is based at Mowbray Square Medical Centre, said on Facebook:
“As you may have seen on the national news, there is a global shortage of the sample tubes we use when we do blood tests.
“This means if you have a routine (non urgent) blood test booked with us in the coming few weeks, we may be getting in touch with you to rearrange it. We will still be doing urgent blood tests and these will be processed as normal.
“We have also removed the online booking option on our practice website to ensure we can strictly control our stocks of sample tubes.”
Supply chain problems, exacerbated by Brexit, have caused numerous problems lately, with supermarkets among those affected.
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The British Medical Association, a professional body for doctors in the UK, said in a statement yesterday the shortage of blood tubes across hospitals and GP surgeries was now severe and if the NHS did not reduce the amount being used in the coming days, even the most clinically important blood tests may be at risk.
The statement added doctors had “made plain their concerns about the implications for patients and their anger that this shortage has been allowed to happen” and the situation was now urgent.
Dr David Wrigley, BMA council deputy chair, said:
“This crisis has put doctors and their patients in a terrible, unenviable position. No doctor knowingly undertakes unnecessary blood tests and to now have to ration all those we are doing, as well as cancel hundreds more, goes against everything we stand for as clinicians.
“However, if we don’t try to follow the NHS guidance, it’s clear we will get to the point where even the most clinically urgent of blood tests may not be able to be done as we simply won’t have the tubes for the blood to go into.
“We are at a very perilous point and it’s surprising that NHS England hasn’t declared a critical incident given the very strong possibility that NHS organisations may temporarily lose the ability to provide lifesaving diagnostic testing.
“Many GP practices – like mine – will now have to spend hours assessing which already scheduled tests can or cannot be cancelled and this takes time away from frontline patient care when it is most needed. Cancelling tests makes patients anxious and can mean a missed diagnosis.”
Have you been affected by the blood shortage? Email us at contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.