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‘We will vaccinate 40 million people in 12 months’ SA Health Minister to Parliament

A few hours before he made the announcement that South Africa would receive its first million vaccine doses in January, Minister of Health Zweli Mkhize took Parliament through the considerations around the vaccine rollout. What’s clear is the scale of the task. Forty million people to be vaccinated over 12 months – 6,300 full-time vaccinators, injecting up to 50 people per day. These were some of the numbers provided to Parliament’s health committee by health minister Zweli Mkhize on Thursday. “The only measure of protection [against Covid-19] is going to come from the vaccination programme,” Mkhize told Parliament, with a minimum of 67% of the South African population needing to receive a Covid-19 vaccine in order for the cycle of transmission to be broken. At the time when Mkhize was addressing the portfolio committee, the question of where these vaccines would come from was still unanswered and causing considerable anxiety to the MPs present. It was only at the tail-end of the meeting that Mkhize was able to announce that South Africa would be receiving one million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine in January from the Serum Institute of India, which is manufacturing the vaccine. A further 500,000 doses will be forthcoming in February. Mkhize apologised for not being able to disclose this arrangement earlier, saying that the government had been in talks “fine-tuning and aligning all the regulatory processes to make sure no unnecessary delays or regulatory impediments” would be an obstacle. South Africa’s regulatory authority, SAHPRA, will in this instance be relying on the approval already granted to the AstraZeneca vaccine by health authorities in the west. The health department estimates that there are 1.25 million healthcare workers in the country, who will be first in line to receive these doses as Phase 1 of the vaccine rollout. Phase 2 will encompass those who are over 60 years old or have comorbidities, and Phase 3 will see other adults over the age of 18 receive the jabs. Mkhize acknowledged that there are still issues to be resolved. It’s unclear whether the vaccines are safe for pregnant women, for instance, so they will not be included in rollout plans at first. It is also not known whether it is necessary for people who have already been infected with coronavirus to be injected. “That issue is being worked on,” Mkhize said. But the primary question remains where the rest of the vaccine doses will come from, with another 38.5 million needed in order to achieve South African herd immunity. Mkhize said that South Africa is expecting to receive its Covax allocation of vaccines in April and that discussions with vaccine manufacturers are at a “quite sensitive” stage. Deputy director-general of health Anban Pillay appeared to suggest to Parliament that a deal was nearing completion with drug company Johnson & Johnson. He described discussions with the company as “fruitful”, and added that he hoped “we will be able to confirm details later”. The health minister stressed that the government would be the sole buy

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