0

DOSES ARE HERE - GO GET YOUR JAB: Darville says shipment will allow increase in COVID vaccinations

Dr Michael Darville, Dr Pearl McMillan, Dr Eldonna Boisson and other health officials welcome the delivery of 57,300 Covid-19 vaccines into the country yesterday. Photos: Donovan McIntosh/Tribune Staff

Dr Michael Darville, Dr Pearl McMillan, Dr Eldonna Boisson and other health officials welcome the delivery of 57,300 Covid-19 vaccines into the country yesterday. Photos: Donovan McIntosh/Tribune Staff

By EARYEL BOWLEG

Tribune Staff Reporter

ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

THE Bahamas received 57,330 doses of the Pfizer vaccine yesterday, the country’s fourth batch of COVID-19 vaccines through the World Health Organization’s COVAX Facility.

Health and Wellness Minister Dr Michael Darville said as a result of the shipment, the country will start to increase vaccinations at various centres.

_

Advertisement

“Not only in the capital of New Providence or Grand Bahama, but also throughout the Family Islands,” he told reporters.

Earlier this month, the government announced that first doses of the Pfizer vaccine would not be offered as of October 18 due to “diminishing supplies”.

Asked when first doses will resume in view of yesterday’s shipment, Dr Darville said: “We have our team on standby. We were waiting for them to physically hit the ground.

“We (are) going to move very quickly because we (have) people at all of our centres expecting to be vaccinated and they want Pfizer. The programme was scaled back a little bit because we needed to have the vaccines on ground. They’re here. They will be stored effectively and you will begin to see even greater rollout because the appetite and the demand for vaccines, in particular Pfizer, is definitely on the rise.

 “I believe that we will begin to see some rollout as early as this week. Probably tomorrow,” he said when asked about a timeline.

 As for how many vaccines are going to the Family Islands, Dr Darville said “it’s all based on demand.”

 “As we speak right now, we’re vaccinating throughout the Family Islands, mainly the ones that have high cases of COVID. That’s ongoing.

 “We knew that the vaccine would come. There was a tentative date for November 1 and thanks to PAHO and thanks to all of the parties involved we’re actually early.”

 In her remarks, Pan American Health Organization/WHO representative Dr Eldonna Boisson said The Bahamas vaccination programme was doing an “excellent job” of vaccine roll outs as they became available.

 She noted that the main challenge has been limited access to vaccines at times due to global demand still “outstretching” supply. The country has Johnson and Johnson, Pfizer, and AstraZeneca vaccines.

 While she encouraged persons to get vaccinated as soon as they can, Dr Boisson underscored that vaccines are not the sole elixir to end the pandemic.

  “I just wish to remind you that at this time, vaccines alone cannot get us out of this pandemic – they cannot. We do not have sufficient supply of vaccination to interrupt the spread of this vaccine and the more it moves around and spreads person-to-person the greater there is a risk of an even more severe variant emerging,” she explained.

 “Vaccines are one very good tool in our armory in this fight against the COVID-19 virus. However, we must continue to use the public health and social measures that we know work to reduce the spread of the virus and all its variants.”

Comments

tribanon 2 years, 6 months ago

No US flag printed on those boxes. Guess they have come our way compliments of Red China. And unlike Minnis, Davis is smartly making it a point not to greet and swoon over the arrival of vaccine doses at the airport.

0

ohdrap4 2 years, 6 months ago

When the delta plus variant arrives, which has changed the spike protein, who is going to the airport?

The present vaccines, or their booster will likely not work for delta plus.

This was revealed by the UK NIH. So did not get it from facebook.

The fully vaccinated nazis need not respond.

0

JokeyJack 2 years, 6 months ago

What a very very sad occurrence. Who would ever welcome such an event? I would compare this to something that happened in the past - but the world is not allowed to do that, and curiously prevented from doing so by the very people who supposedly suffered at that time. At least now we know how it was allowed to happen.

0

SP 2 years, 6 months ago

Pfizer efficacy after 2 doses lasts "about" 6 months. Then what? Isreal and Britain's cases are soaring again so they are now giving 3rd doses. Where does it end?

Nobody knows! There has to be a better solution.

0

carltonr61 2 years, 6 months ago

SP. pharma is trying to recycle fully vaccinated back to un vaccinated status every six months. Guess that goes for air travelers also. No 3-4-5-6 shots every six months no travel. Florida is fighting to end this madness there. I dont know how many shots Bahamians will smile with.

0

BahamaRed 2 years, 6 months ago

Of course the demand for vaccines have increased. The USA is making it mandatory for all foreign visitors to be vaccinated, which means Bahamians will now look to be vaccinated so they can travel in time for Christmas. Smdh...

0

Sign in to comment