Speech

Health and Social Care Secretary statement 30 November

The government held a COVID-19 press conference, during which the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care delivered a statement on booster rollout.

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
The Rt Hon Sajid Javid

Thank you, Prime Minister. A year ago this week, this country made headlines when we became the first nation in the Western world to authorise a vaccine for Covid-19.

This kicked off one of the greatest collective endeavours this nation has seen in peacetime 鈥� and think how far we鈥檝e come since then.115 million jabs right across the UK, and a booster programme that is expanding at a phenomenal pace.

Today we鈥檝e hit that milestone of 18 million booster doses across the UK, and the daily number of jabs has gone up a third since the start of this month. Not only that, but we鈥檝e delivered more booster doses than any other country with the exception of the USA and China. And that is something that we can all be very proud of.

And I鈥檇 like to thank the NHS, the armed forces, the volunteers, and everyone who鈥檚 done so much to make this programme a success 鈥� as well as every single person that has come forward for their jab.

Thanks to you, we鈥檝e made so much progress over the course of a year, we have now weakened the link between cases and hospitalisations and deaths. This is the real-world protection that our vaccination programme provides. Boosters in particular play a very huge part. The booster dose provides a much higher antibody response than the primary course so it鈥檚 more important than ever that people step up and get protected.

We鈥檙e now dealing of course with this new variant, Omicron, which the World Health Organisation said just yesterday, they said that it poses a 鈥榲ery high global risk鈥�.

There have now been 13 confirmed cases in England and also 9 confirmed cases in Scotland, and we expect to see these numbers rising over the next few days.

There鈥檚 a lot we don鈥檛 know of course, and our scientists are working night and day to learn more about this new variant, and what it means for our response.

Our strategy is to buy the time we need to assess this new variant. While doing everything we can to slow the spread of the virus and to strengthen our defences.

One important defence is antivirals. We鈥檝e already secured hundreds of thousands of doses of two antivirals, that have the potential to speed up recovery time and stop infections progressing.

Another, of course, is that vaccination programme. It鈥檚 true that we don鈥檛 yet have a full picture of how our vaccines respond to this new variant. But although it鈥檚 possible for them to be less effective, it鈥檚 unlikely that they have no effectiveness against serious disease.

So the best way that we can strengthen our protective wall is to get as many jabs in arms as possible. I asked the JCVI, our independent expert advisers, to look urgently at our vaccination programme in light of this new variant.

And as the Prime Minister just set out, we鈥檒l be massively expanding booster doses, in line with the JCVI advice. This includes halving the dose interval for booster jabs from six months to three months, expanding the booster doses to include all remaining adults aged 18 and above, and offering booster doses for people who are immunosuppressed.

I鈥檇 like to thank the JCVI for acting with such speed in response to this potential threat. This means we鈥檙e now able to put our booster programme on steroids - and protect even more people, even more quickly.

We鈥檝e got the jabs, thanks to the brilliant work of our Vaccines Taskforce, who鈥檝e made sure that we鈥檝e had a strong supply of vaccines all the way throughout this pandemic, and today we are setting out our plan to get those jabs in arms - and we鈥檒l shortly be hearing a bit more from Amanda.

We鈥檝e set some hugely ambitious targets, and we鈥檙e asking a huge amount from the NHS. But I have no doubt that that they will rise to the challenge, just as they have done throughout this pandemic.

I know that the developments of the past few days have been worrying for some people, and that we鈥檝e brought back memories鈥hat we鈥檙e seeing recently has brought back memories of the strain of the last winter.

But although we can鈥檛 say with certainty what lies ahead, we have one huge advantage that we didn鈥檛 have back then. Our vaccination programme, which has already done so much to keep this virus at bay.

But these defences will only keep us safe if we use them. This is a national mission and we all have a role to play. If we want to give ourselves the best chance of a Christmas with our loved ones, the best thing we can all do is step up, roll up our sleeves and get protected when the time comes. I鈥檒l now hand over to Amanda.

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Published 30 November 2021