“I can announce formally, that from today we have opened up invitations to get a vaccine to all aged over 45, and then we will proceed to everyone aged over 40 in line with supplies,” Health Secretary Matt Hancock said in the House of Commons.
Everybody in the government’s top nine priority groups—those aged 50 and over, the clinically vulnerable, and health and social care workers—has been offered a vaccine, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said.
“We’ve now delivered a first dose to over 32 million people, and are on track to offer a vaccine to all adults by the end of July,” Hancock said.
He said the vaccination programme “has saved over 10,000 lives” and has allowed the government to lift lockdown restrictions across the country.
The UK’s medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), has so far approved three COVID-19 vaccines—the Pfizer/BioNTech, the Oxford/AstraZeneca, and the Moderna jabs.
The regulator is conducting rolling reviews to assess the vaccine candidates produced by Janssen and Novavax.
A cluster of cases of the mutant virus have been identified since early March, mainly in the boroughs of Wandsworth and Lambeth. To date, 44 confirmed cases and 30 probable cases have been found.
But both the UK and the EU regulators insisted that the benefits of vaccination outweigh any risks.