hospital vaccine NHS

Anger as woman, 93, sent on 44-mile round trip for covid and flu jabs

Reading now: 266
www.dailyrecord.co.uk

Older people in Renfrewshire are being sent outwith the area for covid boosters and flu jags.Now there are demands for “local jags for local people” after a shocking case emerged involving a 93-year-old woman.She had to endure a 44-mile round trip from her home in Bridge of Weir to the Vale of Leven Hospital, in West Dunbartonshire, on a Saturday evening.Now politicians are asking why the vital injections are not being given in the county they live in.The NHS has now apologised for sending the woman so far and has mounted a probe.Bishopton, Bridge of Weir and Langbank Tory Councillor James MacLaren wants “urgent reassurances” on the new winter rollout.And concerned SNP MSP Natalie Don has asked health bosses to explain what is going on.Coun

Read more on dailyrecord.co.uk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Delta Covid - Omicron 75% less likely to cause death than Delta COVID-19 variant: South Korean data - globalnews.ca - South Korea
globalnews.ca
71%
400
Omicron 75% less likely to cause death than Delta COVID-19 variant: South Korean data
Omicron coronavirus variant are nearly 75% less likely to develop serious illness or die than those who contract the Delta variant, real world data released on Monday by South Korea’s health authorities showed.A study by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) of some 67,200 infections confirmed since December showed the Omicron variant’s severity and death rates averaged 0.38% and 0.18%, respectively, compared with 1.4% and 0.7% for the Delta cases.The KDCA classed severe cases as people who were hospitalised in intensive care units. COVID cases exceed 400 million globally as Omicrons spreads Around 56% of 1,073 people who died over the past five weeks were either unvaccinated or had received only one dose, the study showed, with people aged 60 or older accounting for 94% of deaths.More than 86% of South Korea’s 52 million population have been double vaccinated and nearly 60% have received a booster shot.South Korea had kept cases and deaths relatively low thanks to widespread social distancing measures and aggressive testing and tracing.The Omicron variant has led to a surge in cases — daily new infections topped a record 100,000 last week — but authorities have pushed ahead with slightly easing social distancing rules amid the lower fatality rate and ahead of a presidential election next month.Contact tracing and mandatory isolation for vaccinated people was scrapped in favour of self diagnosis and at-home treatment to free up medical resources.
DMCA