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At 10.30am this morning, Victoria’s Health Minister Martin Foley and testing commander Jereon Weimar will be holding the state’s daily coronavirus update at Melbourne’s Austin Hospital, one of the state’s vaccine hubs.
Note: I am told we will not getting a live feed of this press conference.
At 10.45am, Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt and ACT Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith will visit the COVID-19 surge centre to announce the first COVID-19 vaccination in the ACT.
We should be getting a live feed of Mr Hunt’s press conference.
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian gave a press conference earlier this morning (see 7.58am post)
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Two hotel quarantine nurses will the first people to receive the COVID-19 Pfizer vaccine in Western Australia on Monday morning.
The state received an initial consignment of 4500 doses on Sunday – which is estimated to have a 90 per cent efficacy rate - marking a significant milestone in the global fight against coronavirus.
WA Health communicable disease control senior medical advisor, Paul Effler, said the four trays of vials were transported from Sydney in a large esky, surrounded by dry ice pellets to keep the vaccine at minus 80 degrees throughout the cross-country trip.
The doses are being stored at Perth Children’s Hospital’s pharmacy freezer.
“We are so lucky, here in Western Australia, to have an opportunity to receive this vaccine ahead of the type of community outbreak we have seen devastate so many countries throughout the world,” he said.
“Moving this extremely valuable and fragile vaccine across Australia has been a logistical challenge – made even more complex by its exact storage and handling requirements.
Prior to being thawed for use, the vaccine must be kept out of the light and maintained at a temperature of between minus 60 and minus 90 degrees.
Staff and residents at Aegis Woodlake will be the first people from an aged care facility to receive the jab, with vaccinations commencing from 10.45am local time today.
There were no new COVID-19 cases confirmed in Victoria on Monday.
Victoria’s Health Minister Martin Foley said two indeterminate test results were received yesterday for hotel quarantine workers at the Novotel and Pullman hotels, but in follow-up tests the pair tested negative.
“This just goes to show the risk-averse nature in which those daily test results are dealt with,” he said.
A nurse who works where COVID-19 positive patients are treated was the first person to be vaccinated on Queensland soil.
Zoe Park is one of 100 people set to be vaccinated at the Gold Coast University Hospital on Monday morning.
A hospital cleaner and a police officer were also among the first to receive the jab.
The first doses of the Pfizer vaccine touched down at Brisbane Airport on Sunday morning and will be injected into a few hundred arms on the Gold Coast, Brisbane and Cairns this week.
There were no local acquired cases detected on Monday for the 46th consecutive day. Two people were diagnosed inside hotel quarantine.
The US stands at the brink of a once-unthinkable tally: 500,000 people lost to the coronavirus.
A year into the pandemic, the running total of lives lost was about 498,000 — roughly the population of Kansas City, Missouri, and just shy of the size of Atlanta. The figure compiled by Johns Hopkins University on Sunday, local time, surpasses the number of people who died in 2019 of chronic lower respiratory diseases, stroke, Alzheimer’s, flu and pneumonia combined.
“It’s nothing like we have ever been through in the last 102 years, since the 1918 influenza pandemic,” the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr Anthony Fauci, said on CNN’s State of the Union. About 675,000 Americans died of the 1918 influenza pandemic, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.
AP
Frontline workers who received some of NSW’s first doses of the coronavirus vaccine have expressed excitement about the rollout, although they know the pandemic is far from over.
Hotel quarantine nurse Brad McEntee said the vaccine was “an extra layer” of protection between his work and the community.
“We will continue to have extremely strict measures in place; we’re still a long way off the end, I think, but this is a step in the right direction,” he said.
Sarah Nilsson, who works as a nurse manager processing arrivals at Sydney Airport, said there were times during the past year when she had drastically limited her movements due to the nature of her work, such as when she worked at the domestic airport during Victoria’s second wave.
“When they were getting 800 cases a day I certainly limited what I was doing: I didn’t go to the shops, I just went to work and went home.“
Asked if she had a message for those who might be hesitant to receive the vaccine, Ms Nilsson said: “It’s worthwhile doing for yourself, for your community and for your family.”
The vaccine rollout has started in South Australia, and Premier Steven Marshall was among the first to receive a shot of the two-dose Pfizer vaccine.
Flying squads of nurses are travelling around the country to start immunising elderly aged care residents and people living in disability care, as healthcare workers, quarantine and border staff begin rolling up their sleeves in hospital hubs.
Deputy Chief Medical Officer Michael Kidd said so far, things were going to plan.
“It is wonderful to see the reports of those first quarantine workers, Border Force workers and front-line health care workers lining up to get their immunisations at the hubs right across the country,” he said on ABC News Breakfast this morning.
Professor Kidd said the beginning of a national vaccine program was a very important day.
“Today is a real milestone in our collective response to tackle COVID-19 and bring things as rapidly under control as we can.”
Deputy Chief Medical Officer Michael Kidd has reassured Australians who are hesitant to get jabbed that the vaccines have gone through a “rigorous and thorough” process to ensure they are safe and effective.
Professor Kidd urged those people to get vaccinated when asked if he was concerned about booing from the crowd at the Australian Open after mentions of the coronavirus vaccine rollout and the Victorian government on Sunday.
“What we know from the research that has been carried out is that 80 per cent of Australians are very determined to get this vaccine,” Professor Kidd told ABC News Breakfast.
“They understand that vaccines save lives and how important this is to getting COVID-19 under control in Australia.
“Yes, there are still some people who are hesitant about the vaccine, to those people I say Therapeutic Goods Administration has gone through its usual rigorous and thorough processes to ensure the safety and the efficacy of these vaccines which are being approved for use in Australia.
“Please, when it comes to be your turn, please line up along with the rest of us and get your vaccine.“
Earlier, Medical Journal of Australia editor Nick Talley said he didn’t think it made a difference whether people received the Pfizer vaccine, which is being rolled out first, or the AstraZeneca jab.
“The bottom line is both vaccines are safe, both protect against severe disease, hospitalisations and deaths, that’s what really matters,” Professor Talley told 2GB radio.
The second person to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in Victoria, Monash Medical Centre emergency medicine director Rachel Rosler, said the rollout signals Australia taking the fight to the virus.
“We’re now on the offensive,” she said. “We’re no longer acting defensively against this, we’re now on the offensive and it’s an amazing day.”
Dr Rosler said she was relieved to have received the vaccine.
“I think in a couple of weeks, it’s really going to kick in,” she said. “I think I’m a little bit more emotional than I thought that I would be.”
Dr Rosler received the vaccine dose at Melbourne’s Monash Medical Centre earlier this morning. You can watch a video of the first doses administered in Victoria here:
Seeing the relief among frontline workers as they received their injection was the happiest moment of the morning for New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian.
“If you put your hand up to say going to work in hotel quarantine you’re a pretty special person to be able to say that you’re putting your own safety on the line to help others,” Ms Berejiklian said.
“The relief of the knowledge that … their exposure is reduced, and the likelihood of them passing it on to anybody else is reduced and that enormous relief gave me a lot of joy today. That was probably my biggest feeling when I saw them get the jab,” she said.
Asked if the NSW government vaccine rollout could pivot to vaccinate a group of the community affected by a sudden outbreak, Ms Berejiklian said “of course”.
“Had the vaccine rollout occurred during a time where we had community transmission and that community transmission occurred of course our strategy would be different,” Ms Berejiklian said.
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2021-02-21 21:32:50Z
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