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  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Onkar Sahota
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Dr Onkar Sahota AM: I also am a GP and want to echo the comments about the tremendous efforts made by the NHS staff in delivering the vaccination programme, but there are challenges in London. If you look at the number of over-80s vaccinated, London had the lowest rate of vaccinations. If you look at the patchwork we have in London, I hear that some parts of London are more advanced than the others and I hear that some parts of London have been asked to slow down to let other parts catch up. There are some challenges. It is...
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Siân Berry
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Siân Berry AM: Thank you very much, Chair. I want to start with Martin Machray if that is all right. I know that we have just discussed the fact that London has been behind in vaccinating the over-80s and the fact that there are differences between boroughs. It has, I think, been hard for both you and us to get up-to-date, detailed, borough-by-borough data collated at a London level, and I just wanted to check what your progress was on making that data available to us so that we can keep an eye on things on a more day-to-day basis...
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: David Kurten
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    David Kurten AM: I would like to ask, yes, Martin Machray if I could, back to the people who were here before. You refer to the vaccine or the injections that people are being given from Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Moderna as vaccines. However, the substances from Pfizer and Moderna are not vaccines, as people understand vaccines. They are experimental Messenger RNA (mRNA) gene technologies. Why do you continue to refer to those two substances and injections as vaccines?
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [14]

    • Question by: Caroline Pidgeon
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Caroline Pidgeon MBE AM: I would like to start my questions with Martin [Machray]. I would like to ask you about the take-up of the vaccine amongst blind and visually impaired people. Some serious concerns were raised on the [BBC] Radio 4 In Touch programme last week and have been powerfully highlighted by the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) relating to the challenges in accessing information and travelling to get the vaccine. In terms of getting the vaccine, I understand why places like the ExCeL centre are being used for vaccinations, but travelling when blind, at the best...
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [18]

    • Question by: Murad Qureshi
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Murad Qureshi AM: Thank you, Chair. Can I address my question to Martin and then Tom? Martin, you informed us earlier that yesterday we had over a million Londoners vaccinated with the first jab. Martin Machray (Joint Regional Chief Nurse for London and Covid-19 Incident Director, NHS England): Yes. Murad Qureshi AM: That is great news, but can you give us an estimate of the proportion of Londoners not registered with GPs, and how we intend to vaccinate them?
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London (Supplementary) [19]

    • Question by: Joanne McCartney
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Joanne McCartney AM : My first question is to Martin Machray. We have heard earlier that some Londoners are hesitant to get the vaccine and work is being carried out to build their trust and confidence, but are records being kept consistently across all of London’s Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) of those who have declined the vaccine, and is there capacity in the system in a few months’ time to contact those people again whose confidence may have risen?
  • COVID-19 Vaccination Delivery in London

    • Reference: 2023/1481
    • Question by: Navin Shah
    • Meeting date: 04 February 2021
    Is London now receiving its fair share of COVID-19 vaccinations and can we be confident that it will continue to do so over the coming months?
  • London and Covid-19 Restrictions (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Andrew Boff
    • Meeting date: 12 January 2021
    Andrew Boff AM: Professor Fenton, on I think 3 March [2020], the Mayor of London said that there is no risk of people catching coronavirus while travelling on buses or trains in the capital. Did you give him that advice?
  • London and Covid-19 Restrictions (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: David Kurten
    • Meeting date: 12 January 2021
    David Kurten AM: Thank you, Chair. I would like to ask Dr Fenton. We heard from the Chair and you earlier about admissions to hospitals with COVID being the highest since the start of the declared pandemic in March 2020. How do total hospital admissions now, this January, compare to last January and other winter seasons before this year?
  • London and Covid-19 Restrictions (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Caroline Russell
    • Meeting date: 12 January 2021
    Caroline Russell AM: Thank you, Chair, and thank you, Martin, for that really clear description of what is happening in our hospitals and to the people working in those hospitals. I want to talk about the vaccination of frontline workers. I do realise that vaccination rollout is in early stages and that we will not know for a few months whether vaccination has any effect on reducing transmission, but yesterday the Government released guidance that said phase two of vaccination may include targeted vaccination of those at high risk of exposure and/or those delivering key public services. This week we...