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originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: glen200376
You might be answering your own question somewhat with the "private investment portfolio" part given the kind of crap Sunak and his ilk are known to perpetuate.
The info is sound enough all the same, as they will indeed stop offering COVID-19 shots to people under 50 next month which hardly amounts to another vaccine push.
www.theguardian.com...
Are they planning another roll out?
did the last one fail?
So far more than 17.3 million people have come forward for a booster shot this winter, according to NHS England.
More than 144 million doses of the vaccine have now been delivered since grandmother Maggie Keenan made history as the first person in the world to receive the vaccine outside of a trial.
A smaller programme allowing severely immunosuppressed people to book for first, second and third doses will continue after 12 February.
news.sky.com...
originally posted by: gortex
a reply to: v1rtu0s0
You have the PM you deserve for pushing this garbage "vaccine".
Pushing this garbage "vaccine" ?
"The United States is the first in the World to produce a verifiably safe and effective vaccine"
What a short memory you have.
originally posted by: glen200376
So why did Sunak sign a multi million pound deal to bring a Modern a factory to the UK for 10 years?
originally posted by: paraphi
originally posted by: glen200376
So why did Sunak sign a multi million pound deal to bring a Modern a factory to the UK for 10 years?
To develop indigenous capacity for vaccine production, so that the UK does not need to rely on someone else. It's called planning ahead.
To the OP. In the UK there are a range of vaccines, usually available for children, but also for anyone, for example when they travel. Furthermore, the flu vaccination is available and now the Covid vaccination looks routinely available for vulnerable groups. Nothing sinister about making sure the distribution of stocks is efficient.