Covid-19 vaccines: France to extend interval between mRNA jabs by 2 weeks

France will extend the interval between the two doses of mRNA coronavirus vaccine by two more weeks to quickly inoculate more people amid surging infections, Health Minister Olivier Veran said

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Coronavirus Tests | France | Coronavirus Vaccine

IANS  |  Paris 

will extend the interval between the two doses of mRNA by two more weeks to quickly inoculate more people amid surging infections and saturated hospitals, Health Minister Olivier Veran said.

"As of April 14, for all first injections, we will be offering a vaccine booster at 42 days instead of the current 28. This will allow us to vaccinate faster without reducing protection," Veran told the weekly newspaper Journal de Dimanche on Sunday.

"Prolonging the gap between shots of mRNA anti-COVID vaccines should help us to save 1.8 million injections in the second half of May," he said.

Starting from Monday, the AstraZeneca vaccine, which uses traditional virus-based technology, would be proposed to all over-55s without comorbidity; and shots of Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, both mRNA vaccines, would be available to all people older than 60 from April 16, Xinhua news agency quoted the Minister as further saying.

In a further move to ramp up vaccination rollout, France, on Monday, will receive 200,000 doses of the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine, a week earlier than the schedule, Veran added.

To date, 10.7 million people in received their first shot of the vaccine, or 20.6 per cent of the adult population and 3.7 million have received two doses.

The French government aims to administer 20 million jabs by mid-May and to inoculate a total of 30 million by June.

A week after entered its third lockdown, the number of new Covid-19 cases "remains very high," Veran said.

"We can expect that after a period of stabilisation comes the fall. But for that, we must keep going."

As of Monday morning, the cumulative number of coronavirus cases in France increased to 5,119,585, while the death toll stood at 98,909.

--IAN

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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Mon, April 12 2021. 12:13 IST
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