Covid vaccine: Boris Johnson warns of 'several more hurdles'

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media captionPrime Minister Boris Johnson warned that we are still in a 'critical moment' in terms of our Covid-19 response

The development of a coronavirus vaccine has "cleared one significant hurdle but there are several more to go", Boris Johnson has said.

The PM said early findings showing a jab could prevent 90% of people getting Covid-19 were positive, but added it was "very, very early days".

He warned people not to "rely on this news as a solution" to the pandemic.

"The biggest mistake we could make now would be to slacken our resolve at a critical moment," he said.

It came as a further 21,350 coronavirus cases were reported in the UK on Monday, along with 194 deaths within 28 days of a positive test.

England's deputy chief medical officer, Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, said he was "hopeful" the first vaccine could be seen by Christmas and there would be a "much better horizon" by spring.

Speaking alongside Mr Johnson at a Downing Street news conference, Prof Van-Tam said there was more work to be done before it became available to the public.

"This is a very important scientific breakthrough. I am certain of that," he said.

He said age would be the "biggest priority" when drawing up a list of who would be able to access the new vaccine.

Prof Van-Tam described the development as similar to "getting to the end of the playoff final, it's gone to penalties, the first player goes up and scores a goal".

"You haven't won the cup yet, but what it does is it tells you is that the goalkeeper can be beaten," he said.

The prime minister said "if and when" the vaccine was approved for use, the UK "will be ready to use it".

He said 40 million doses - enough to vaccinate up to 20 million people - had been ordered, putting the UK near the front of the queue of countries in securing the jab.

Mr Johnson said he had talked for a long time about "the distant bugle of the scientific cavalry coming over the brow of the hill" with a solution.

"I can tell you that tonight that toot of the bugle is louder, but it's still some way off, we absolutely cannot rely on this news as a solution," he said.

media captionHealth Correspondent Laura Foster explains what the latest Covid-19 vaccine news means

The vaccine - developed by Pfizer and German-based BioNTech - has been hailed as a "milestone" by many scientists.

It has been tested on 43,500 people in six countries with no safety concerns raised.

Prof Van-Tam warned it was not yet known whether any vaccine would prevent someone passing on coronavirus to someone else.

Dr Charlie Weller, a vaccines specialist at the Wellcome Trust, said the speed of the vaccine's progress was "phenomenal" but warned no single jab would be a silver bullet against the virus.

Meanwhile, Surrey Police chief constable Gavin Stephens confirmed discussions with the Army were under way to determine the location of mass Covid-19 vaccination centres.

He said there was a question over whether vaccinations should happen in the same place as testing and how many sites would be needed to meet capacity.

PM's message? Don't drop your guard

Managing expectations seemed to be a key theme of Monday's televised briefing.

Both Prime Minister Boris Johnson and England's deputy chief medical officer Prof Jonathan Van-Tam were at pains to inject a bit of realism into some of the euphoria over the vaccine news.

The PM said we must not "slacken our resolve", while Prof Van-Tam said it would not make "any difference" for the second wave this winter.

Their message was simple - do not drop your guard against the virus.

It is easy to understand why. The world has been waiting so long for positive vaccine news.

But the announcement is just the first hurdle of many.

Safety has still to be proved, the jab's ability to stop transmission rather than just prevent disease is not yet known, how long immunity lasts is uncertain, and whether it works with older people is still to be confirmed.

Other regulatory hurdles will have to be overcome - and that is before we even think about manufacture and distribution.

It could be that one of the many other vaccines being trialled proves more effective in the long-term. But, as Prof Van-Tam said, Monday's news showed the opponent could be beaten.

Mr Johnson said levels of Covid-19 remained significant and were doubling in many areas, with recent data showing one in 90 people in England currently has the virus.

"There is a long way before we have got this thing beat," he said.

He reiterated the government's intention to end England's current lockdown on 2 December and replace it with tiered regional restrictions.

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