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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
David Hughes & Lorraine King

Coronavirus vaccine given to 500,000 in 2 weeks despite pledge of 'millions by year's end'

Around 500,000 people have had the coronavirus vaccine despite the Health Secretary saying he expected millions to get the jab by Christmas.

Boris Johnson said today at a No 10 press conference that more than half-a-million people in the UK have had the first dose of the two-part vaccinate.

This equates to around 38,000 people a day since the vaccine was rolled out but means it is unlikely that Matt Hancock will hit his target with just days to go before Christmas.

British grandmother Margaret Keenan became the first patient in the world to receive the Pfizer Covid-19 jab on December 8 following its clinical approval.

Mr Hancock said at the time: “We’ve got a millions of doses we expect to arrive before the end of the year.

Around 500,000 have received the vaccine (via REUTERS)

When asked how quickly people would receive the shot, he said: “Millions by the end of year.”

The Prime Minister revealed the number of people who had been vaccinated as he moved to soothe concerns the country risked being effectively cut off from parts of Europe and beyond following the discovery of a new strain of coronavirus.

He argued that the Government took "prompt and decisive" action when the mutant variant was discovered in the UK on Friday, resulting in the creation of strict Tier 4 restrictions that have taken a scythe to Christmas plans for millions.

It came as the Government's New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats advisory group (NervTag) told a Science Media Centre briefing on the new mutant variant that cases outside of Tier 4 in London and the south east of England "are increasing at similar rates" those in affected areas, and that it had a "transmission advantage" over other strains of the virus.

Boris Johnson held a No 10 press conference today (BBC)
Margaret Keenan, 90, is the first patient in the world to receive the Pfizer/BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine (Getty Images)

However, World Health Organisation director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said there was "no evidence" the new strain was "more likely to cause severe disease or mortality".

Elsewhere, regional public health directors in Manchester and the West Midlands urged anyone who travelled from a Tier 4 area or Wales to self isolate upon their arrival and "assume" they have the new Covid-19 variant.

Speaking at a Downing Street press conference on Monday evening, after crunch talks involving members of the Cobra emergency committee to prevent the UK being cut off from the continent in the days before Christmas, Mr Johnson said discussions were taking place to "unblock the flow of trade as fast as possible".

He said: "It was an excellent conversation with the French President (Emanuel Macron), he stressed he was keen, I would say, to sort it out in the next few hours if we can.

"Our teams will be working on it flat out - if we can get a result then, that would be great, but we will do it as fast as we can."

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps urged people not to travel to Kent amid the closure of the French border.

He told the press conference: "Please don't travel to Kent.

"Most people should be staying at home, everybody in Tier 4 must at stay home and in Tier 3 stay very local."

Referring to the vaccine, Mr Johnson said: "I can today announce that over half a million people, more than 500,000 people in the UK, have now received their first dose."

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