From the Guardian/MSN:
“Disability
services take Covid vaccinations 'into their own hands' amid rollout failures”
Failures with
the federal government’s Covid-19 vaccine rollout are forcing residential
disability care providers to circumvent the system and approach general
practitioners directly to secure supplies for vulnerable residents, rather than
waiting for deliveries to arrive at their facilities. Disability care residents
and their support workers were included in the highest priority stage for the
commonwealth’s vaccine rollout, phase 1a, and were to be serviced by in-reach
teams who would visit disability accomodation to administer the vaccine. But
phase 1a is now well behind schedule. The roughly six weeks the government gave
itself to complete the stage has now elapsed, and only 112,830 of the 190,000
aged and disability care residents in Australia have been vaccinated.
National
Disability Services, the peak group for 1,100 non-governmental service
providers, said it was receiving a significant number of complaints about the
rollout from its members, including about poor communications from government
on when and where to expect vaccine deliveries. The NDS chief executive, David
Moody, said some of his members had now begun “taking matters into their own
hands”. “We do know, and this as recently as this morning, that a number of our
provider members are taking matters into their own hands, and doing their best
to support clients – often with very significant behavioural challenges – to
access the vaccines through their local GP, rather than waiting for the vaccine
to be delivered to the disability accomodation where they might be living,”
Moody told the Guardian on Tuesday. “They’re doing that because they haven’t
been able to get the vaccine where their clients have been living. And so it is
with their own workforce. The intention with phase 1a had been that it would
allow people with a disability and the workers supporting them to get the
vaccine … at their place of residence. “That hasn’t proven to be possible in
many cases.”
Moody
acknowledged the rollout was a complex and difficult exercise. But he said
providers needed more information from government, including at least an
“understanding of when they might expect to get the vaccine, how they might
expect to get the vaccine, and where they might expect to get the vaccine
from”. Visiting GP clinics, he said, was not ideal for disability care
residents. It added more pressure on already overwhelmed GP clinics, and was
not suitable for many people living in disability care. “Many people living in
disability accomodation are living there because they exhibit quite challenging
behaviours and these are behaviours which are, if you like, provoked when a
person has been asked to attend a doctor’s surgery that they are not familiar
with to receive an injection, otherwise known as an invasive procedure, from
someone they also might not be absolutely familiar with,” he said. “The main
point of allowing for the vaccination to be delivered to and provided at
disability accomodation was in anticipation of these issues.” The health
department said in a statement that it continued to work “closely with
disability advocates, stakeholders, and disability providers”. “The priority is
to deliver vaccines in a safe and efficient way in settings where multiple
people living with a disability reside and to provide access that supports
individual’s personal choice,” the department said. “This includes enabling
people living with disability to access a vaccine through a GP if that is their
preference.”
The criticism
comes as the federal government continues to face sustained pressure over its
vaccine rollout. By Tuesday, about 854,983 Australians had been vaccinated,
still well short of the initial target of four million by the end of March.
That target has since shifted to providing one dose to all Australians by
October. Epidemiologist Mary-Louise McLaws said the current average rate for
the last six weeks was about 22,000 doses per day. “I calculate to have 85%
population vaccinated by end of year we need 133,000/day every day from
tomorrow to Dec 31,” she tweeted.
On Tuesday, the
prime minister, Scott Morrison, sought to blame the slower-than-expected
rollout squarely on import obstructions by European nations. “The challenges
Australia have had has been a supply problem,” he said. “It is pure and simple.
There were over 3m doses from overseas that never came. And that’s obviously
resulted in an inability to get 3m doses out and distributed through the
network. “I think it is really important that these points are made very
clearly when we are talking about the rollout of the vaccine.” Experts
responded to the claim by saying failed supply was “not an act of god”. “They
reflect failures in procurement, especially in failing to diversify supplies to
insure against these kinds of risks,” the Grattan Institute’s Brendan Coates
tweeted. Morrison committed to providing more data transparency on the rollout.
At the same press conference, he said he would not give a weekly average figure
for the volume of AstraZeneca vaccine being produced by CSL at its Melbourne
facility.
^ At one time
the United States was seen, by the world, as a hot Covid mess (and we were.)
Now with over 100 million Americans (out of 330 million) vaccinated we are seen,
by the world, as a leader in Covid Vaccination. Australia, Canada, New Zealand,
the EU, Russia, China, etc. have not been able to plan or supply their citizens
with the Covid Vaccine. It is surprising for the wealthy countries (Australia,
Canada, New Zealand and parts of the EU) since they had a year to prepare. The
chaos of the Covid Pandemic and all its constantly-changing restrictions
continues because of the chaos and confusion of the Covid Vaccination Programs
in these places. It’s sad to see the most-vulnerable (the disabled, the
elderly, etc.) have to “fight” on their own to protect themselves because their
Local, State and Federal Governments are not able to protect them. ^
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