Not sure what you mean by diluted but apparently the vaccine has to be kept in batches of 1,000 doses. That means it will have to be administered in hospitals or special units with very low temperature storage and where lots of people can attend.No - once the vaccine is warmed up and diluted it has a long enough life for a day's use.
Another problem they are finding out this weekend is that the vaccine comes in boxes of some 960 doses, Under current legislation and guidelines, the HCP's cannot split the box between sites, but are not authorized to vaccinate anyone who is not in the current tranche. So a box will go to a hospital, then everyone will need to be bused in and in the correct sequence, Any phials left over will need to be scrapped under current regs, whereas it would have been sensible to form an orderly queue as us Brits are wont to do. Its not a Foodbank or cinema queue.I'm pretty sure that you'd have to be a qualified HCP to do this (especially from a legal stand point), not to mention the expertise required with dealing with a drug that has to be kept in a deep cold state.
Could courier a box to a temporary centre on the day of vaccination since it will keep in a normal fridge for a day. Maybe Amazon or DHL or FEDEX could offer a priority service? Prime?Not sure what you mean by diluted but apparently the vaccine has to be kept in batches of 1,000 doses. That means it will have to be administered in hospitals or special units with very low temperature storage and where lots of people can attend.
The difficulty of vaccinating the whole population is immense and will take huge resources to do this quickly and effectively. It was mentioned on the BBC last night that even lay people could be trained up. What better and immediate resource is available than us type 1 needle experts? It would probably be an IM injection rather than a subcut but I'd be up for the task!
Best solution, give it to Father Christmas to distribute Christmas Eve (Sorry I just had to)
I was listening to someone describing the conditions under which the vaccine would be transported and then used - they said that it was warmed up and then diluted with saline to get the injected dose - but if regulations on how it has to be used have been slapped on it then all bets are off - and so is the scheduled list of those who will be getting it first - which were to be the most elderly and those looking after them. If the vaccine is hospital only then there will have to be a rethink.Not sure what you mean by diluted but apparently the vaccine has to be kept in batches of 1,000 doses. That means it will have to be administered in hospitals or special units with very low temperature storage and where lots of people can attend.
I think you're probably right but needs must so it could change. In the past only medics could take blood, now students can be trained as phlebotomists to do it so who knows?I'm pretty sure that you'd have to be a qualified HCP to do this (especially from a legal stand point), not to mention the expertise required with dealing with a drug that has to be kept in a deep cold state.
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