Scott Morrison blames international supply issues for slow Covid vaccine rollout

The prime minister, Scott Morrison, has rejected claims Australia’s vaccine rollout has been held up by the batch testing of 2.5m domestically made doses and instead blamed international supply issues.




© Provided by The Guardian
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

At a press conference on Tuesday after New Zealand announced a trans-Tasman travel bubble, Morrison said Australia had not received 3.1m AstraZeneca doses from overseas. He said that was to blame for the massive discrepancy between the 855,000 vaccinations administered so far and the missed target of 4m doses by the end of March.




© Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
Prime minister Scott Morrison has blamed international supply for the huge lag in in the government’s Covid vaccination program.

The federal government is under fire for the slow pace of the rollout and a lack of transparency about how many doses have been manufactured locally and administered.

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The Reuters news agency on Tuesday reported the European Union had blocked shipments of 3.1m doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine to Australia.

“They’ve blocked 3.1m shots so far,” an Australian government source said, according to Reuters. They added Australia had only received 300,000 doses and a further 400,000 doses were scheduled to arrive by the end of April. “We haven’t given up hope but we’ve stopped counting them in our expected supplies,” the source said.

Morrison promised on Tuesday to increase the number of GPs administering vaccines from 1,500 to 4,000 but refused to say how many doses of AstraZeneca vaccine CSL is producing in Melbourne each week.

Related: Australia warned it won’t achieve herd immunity unless it deals with vaccine hesitancy

Morrison told reporters in Canberra it would be “misleading” to provide an average. At its fastest pace, the company had achieved “around the 800,000 [per week] mark”, the prime minister said. “We want to keep achieving that … If we can do better, we will.”

Previously, health officials have said they expected 1m locally made doses to be available per week. Morrison claimed in March that CSL was already producing more than 900,000 shots a week.

In response to a news.com.au report that some 2.5m CSL doses were being held up by testing, Morrison said there had been “no hold-up” because approval by the Therapeutic Goods Administration and batch testing was “a necessary part of the process to guarantee Australian safety”.

“I think it is very important that people understand [that] the fill and finish process doesn’t involve the little vial coming off the production line and then going straight to the courier and the GP or the hospital,” the Liberal leader said.

Video: Health Minister spruiks vaccinations as aged care rollout yet to meet target (Sky News Australia)

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Morrison declined to set a new target for the end of April and sought to explain the missed 4m target by blaming “frustrated” supply and “non-delivery” of vaccines. “The simple explanation is that … 3.1m vaccines never came to Australia,” he said.

The health department secretary, Prof Brendan Murphy, offered the same explanation in mid-March when the government walked away from its pledge to “fully vaccinate” all Australians by October.

But on 5 March, after Italy blocked 250,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, the federal health minister, Greg Hunt, was keen to downplay the impact of overseas supply issues on the rollout.

Hunt said at the time Australia’s “forward projections did not involve this particular shipment of one set of doses from one country, from a firm which has a deep, broad global supply chain”.

Morrison said on Tuesday the government was providing weekly statistics on the number of vaccines administered but “there is no reason why these figures can’t be done on a more regular basis”.

Related: Australia Covid vaccine tracker: how is the rollout progressing and when will you get the jab?

“It is a good idea for us to have more data transparency on these issues and that is what we will be discussing with the premiers and chief ministers on Friday,” he said.

Morrison defended the rollout by noting 79,000 vaccinations were administered in one day last week – which he claimed was “actually better” than where New Zealand, Germany, South Korea and Japan were at the same point in their programs.

Australia’s ambitious rollout requires it to administer at least 180,000 vaccines per day – a curve that has only gotten steeper due to the sluggish start.

The opposition health spokesperson, Mark Butler, said on Tuesday the rollout was “so far behind every single commitment Scott Morrison and Greg Hunt has given to the Australian people”. “Surely, they must admit this is not going well,” Butler told reporters. “They have to admit that, get people around the table and adjust their strategy.”

Butler proposed allowing pharmacists to administer vaccines sooner than planned and considering “mass vaccination centres of the type you see in other countries”.

But Morrison said the available vaccines matched the current distribution network and without further doses, mass vaccination centres would make no difference to the pace of the rollout. “It was never the plan that pharmacists would be involved in the vaccination program at this point,” he said.

Morrison said the early phases of the rollout focused on vulnerable populations who would receive vaccines from their GPs and pharmacists would administer doses by mid-year.

A CSL spokesperson said the company was “committed to providing the Australian government with the doses required to fulfil its Covid-19 vaccination strategy”.

“In the first week of the local rollout, 832,000 doses were released ahead of schedule to the Australian government,” the spokesperson said.

“Further batches of finished doses are now being released on a rolling basis every week. When approved by the TGA, they are delivered to the national network of vaccination centres and GP clinics. CSL hopes to reach a rolling output of 1m doses a week as soon as possible.”

An EU spokesperson told Reuters it had rejected only one of a total of 491 Covid vaccine export requests since it enhanced export transparency in late January and seven requests were currently being reviewed. They declined to say whether shipment requests to Australia were under review.

Source: Thanks msn.com