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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Sophie McCoid

Coronavirus could become 'much more treatable' over next 18 months

Coronavirus could become a "much more treatable disease" over the next six to 18 months according to the boss of the NHS.

Sir Simon Stevens told MPs he hoped more treatments for Covid-19 would become available which, coupled with vaccination, would see a turn for the better.

And he said it "would be great" if the Covid vaccine and flu vaccine were combined into a single jab, if not for next winter then future ones.

He said: "The first half of the year, vaccination is going to be crucial, I think a lot of us in the health service are increasingly hopeful that the second half of the year and beyond we will also see more therapeutics and more treatments for coronavirus. "

He said there were a number of potential new treatments in the pipeline "and I think it is possible that over the course of the next six to 18 months, coronavirus becomes a much more treatable disease with antivirals and other therapies, which alongside the vaccination programme holds out the hope of a return to a much more normal future."

Sir Simon also told the Health and Social Care Committee that vaccines were being used as fast as they arrived in the NHS, and more than half of those aged 75-79 have now had their first vaccine doses.

He said: "We are at the moment pretty much using up each week's vaccine as we get it, as we receive it through the safety testing, the batch testing, distribution to the NHS, then it gets sent out across the country."

Asked about vaccine priority, he said teachers, police and people with learning disabilities will need to be considered for the next round of Covid-19 vaccinations, and suggested that this should perhaps happen as early as February.

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He said: "Our current proposition that once we have offered a vaccination to everyone aged 70 and above, and the clinically extremely vulnerable, then the next group of people would be people in their 60s and 50s, but there will also be a legitimate discussion in my view that the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation will have to advise on as to whether or not there are certain other groups who should receive that priority.

"People with learning disabilities and autism, certain key public service workers, teachers, the police, they will have to be factored in that post-February 15 prioritisation decision."

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