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Vulnerable patients to receive additional Covid boosters in spring and autumn

Vulnerable patients to receive additional Covid boosters in spring and autumn

Over-75s, care home residents and over-12s who are immunosuppressed will receive an additional Covid booster jab from spring.

The governments of all four UK nations have accepted the advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) published today.

The JCVI has also advised UK governments that a further booster is likely to be advised ‘for people who are at higher risk of severe’ Covid this autumn, with more definitive advice to come ‘in due course’.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister has also announced that the public, in England, will not be legally required to self-isolate with Covid-19 from Thursday this week, while free testing will end from April except for the elderly and vulnerable.

The JCVI said its recommendations comes as immunity derived from vaccination ‘declines over time’ and ‘many of the oldest adults received their most recent vaccine dose in September or October 2021’.

Therefore, as a ‘precautionary strategy’ to ‘maintain high levels of immunity’ the extra spring dose is adviced ‘around six months after the last vaccine dose’.

Who will be offered a ‘spring’ booster jab?

  • adults aged 75 years and over, residents in a care home for older adults; and
  • individuals aged 12 years and over who are immunosuppressed, as defined in in the Covid-19 healthcare guidance Green Book.

Source: JCVI

JCVI Covid chair Professor Wei Shen Lim said that the booster vaccination programme has ‘so far provided excellent protection against severe Covid-19’.

However, ‘to maintain high levels of protection for the most vulnerable individuals in the population, an extra spring dose of vaccine is advised ahead of an expected autumn booster programme later this year,’ he added. 

‘The JCVI will continue its rolling review of the vaccination programme and the epidemiological situation, particularly in relation to the timing and value of doses for less vulnerable older adults and those in clinical risk groups ahead of autumn 2022.’

It will also keep under review whether the spring booster programme should be extended to further at-risk groups, said health secretary Sajid Javid.

Mr Javid said: ‘Following the JCVI’s advice, I have asked the NHS to prepare to offer those eligible a vaccine from around six months after their last dose and they will set out further details in due course.

‘We know immunity to Covid-19 begins to wane over time. That’s why we’re offering a spring booster to those people at higher risk of serious Covid-19 to make sure they maintain a high level of protection. It’s important that everyone gets their top-up jabs as soon as they’re eligible.’

The news comes as NHS England advised last week that GPs will not take the lead on the vaccination of children aged five to eleven, due to workload concerns.

The Government has also said that it intends to extend rules that mean a wider range of healthcare professionals can administer vaccines.

Vaccine type and dosage

The types of vaccine offered for the spring dose will be as follows:

  • For eligible adults aged 18 years and over, 50mcg Moderna (Spikevax) vaccine or 30mcg Pfizer-BioNTech (Comirnaty) vaccine.
  • For eligible persons aged 12 to 18 years, 30 mcg Pfizer-BioNTech (Comirnaty) vaccine.

Source: JCVI


          

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READERS' COMMENTS [2]

Please note, only GPs are permitted to add comments to articles

Karen Potterton 21 February, 2022 10:11 pm

You heard it here first.. aaah no you didn’t did you? This was on the national press newsfeeds several hours before it was on here. Yet more evidence that the powers that be think of us as shit on their shoes, not even worthy of advising about decisions in time to parry questions and demands from our own patients.

Patrufini Duffy 22 February, 2022 3:27 pm

Clever compromise to attenuate the fact that you couldn’t really care less about them. Smokescreen. Shock horror.