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Leading vaccine expert warns giving regular boosters 'not sustainable'
‘We can’t vaccinate the planet every six months’: Leading Oxford vaccine expert warns giving regular boosters is ‘not sustainable’ and says fourth Covid jabs should not be rolled out until there is more evidence
- Oxford professor Sir Andrew Pollard helped develop AstraZeneca jab in 2020
- He expressed optimism, even as Omicron variant continues to ravage the UK
- But he insisted giving boosters to people every six months was ‘not sustainable’
Britons shouldn’t be offered a fourth Covid jab until there is more evidence, the head of the country’s vaccine body has claimed.
Sir Andrew Pollard, chairperson of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) added that giving boosters to people every six months was ‘not sustainable’.
The professor, who was chief investigator of the Oxford Covid- 19 vaccine trials and director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, helped develop the AstraZeneca jab in 2020.
Britons shouldn’t be offered a fourth Covid jab until there is more evidence, the head of the country’s vaccine body has claimed
Sir Andrew Pollard, chairperson of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) added that giving boosters to people every six months was ‘not sustainable’
Speaking to The Telegraph a year on from the first time AstraZeneca was administered to a member of the public, Prof Pollard expressed optimism going forward – even as the Omicron variant continues to ravage the UK.
‘The worst is absolutely behind us. We just need to get through the winter,’ he told the newspaper.
As for Boris Johnson’s current handling of the crisis, with his relatively light restrictions across England, Prof Pollard said: ‘(It) seems to be working so far. The system isn’t falling over. But it’s finely balanced.
‘We can’t fully answer whether he’s got it right for some time.’
In the 12 months since AstraZeneca was injected into Brian Pinker, 82, a dialysis patient, nine billion Covid doses, including AstraZeneca, have been given worldwide.
In Britain alone, 90% of over-12s have had their first vaccine and more than 80% have had two doses, while 33 million boosters have been given.
According to Prof Pollard, when the Oxford/AZ trials were first started in April 2020, vaccine scientists and investigators were told it would be two years before the vaccine could be rolled out.
With so much of the UK and other richer nations now vaccinated, Prof Pollard has added his voice to calls to ‘open up’, despite the ongoing threat from Omicron – which the latest UK studies have suggested is milder than Delta.
Prof Pollard told The Telegraph: ‘At some point, society has to open up. When we do open, there will be a period with a bump in infections, which is why winter is probably not the best time. But that’s a decision for the policy makers, not the scientists.
‘Our approach has to switch, to rely on the vaccines and the boosters. The greatest risk is still the unvaccinated.’
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