GETTING booster jabs to all Scots aged 18 and above by the end of this year will be a “monumental challenge”, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has said.
With the vaccination programme being accelerated in a bid to combat the new Omicron variant of the virus, the First Minister said she did not underestimate the scale of the challenge.
But as she stressed vaccination was the “best line of defence” against Omicron, Sturgeon said: “We’ve got to bust a gut to get this programme done as quickly as possible.”
To meet the ambition of offering all eligible adults a booster dose of vaccine by the end of December means that more than 70,000 Scots a day will need to get jagged, it has been estimated.
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Sturgeon, who has previously warned Omicron could lead to a “tsunami” of new infections, said that government officials were currently working with local health boards to speed up the programme.
The First Minister said they were considering “all of the possible options to build capacity in a system that is already operating at a very fast pace”.
This will be done by a combination of bringing in additional staff to give the injections, increasing the number of appointments at vaccine centres and looking at opening up new centres.
Sturgeon said: “We are currently the most vaccinated part of the UK, including through boosters, but we do want to speed that up because Omicron is running very fast and we need to speed up the vaccines.
“We also know from some of the early evidence in terms of being infected with Omicron one or two doses is not sufficient ... so it's really, really important we get booster jags into people’s arms as quickly as possible.”
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As part of that, members of the armed forces will be deployed to Scotland to boost the vaccination effort – with 70 men and women expected to help with this once they have been trained.
The vaccination programme is being accelerated as the country heads into the festive season, and as NHS staff were “exhausted” after almost two years of dealing with the pandemic.
Sturgeon accepted there were these “very real challenges” to the vaccine programme, but added: “The other challenge that is inescapable is we have a virus that has mutated again and is more transmissible than anything that has come before.
“Booster jags are our best defence against this, so we’ve got to, excuse the lack of technical language here, we’ve got to bust a gut to get this programme done as quickly as possible and we are challenging ourselves to do that at pace.”
But she stated: “I don’t underestimate any of this, this is a monumental challenge.”
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Currently, 2,154,571 people in Scotland have had a booster vaccination, with those aged 30 and above now able to book appointments in the system, which will then be opened up to all adults later this week.
Sturgeon said if people had difficulty making an appointment they should try again the next day “because we are building the capacity, getting more appointments into the system, literally every day”.
An Army spokesman said around 100 servicemen and women are currently assisting with vaccinations in 11 health board areas across Scotland – Ayrshire and Arran, Borders, Dumfries and Galloway, Fife, Forth Valley, Grampian, Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Highland, Lanarkshire, Lothian and Tayside.
He added some 70 additional staff would be deployed to the vaccine programme in Scotland in the coming days, once they have received training.
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