England: Queen Elizabeth II vaccinated against Covid-19

 

Elizabeth II and Prince Philip received their first injection of the coronavirus vaccine. The Queen, who will soon be 95, and her husband, who will turn 100 in June, were vaccinated on Saturday January 9, Buckingham Palace announced. They join the roughly 1.5 million people who have already received their first injection in the UK. A second source told UK news agency PA that the Queen and her husband were vaccinated by the royal family doctor at Windsor Castle, where they are spending the period of confinement.

Usually quite discreet about her state of health, “the queen has decided to make this information public in order to avoid inaccuracies and possible rumors,” added the press agency.

Nearly 80,000 dead from Covid-19 in the United Kingdom

Europe’s country most bereaved by the pandemic with nearly 80,000 deaths – including 1,325 announced on Friday, a record – the United Kingdom is currently facing an outbreak of contamination by the coronavirus attributed to a more contagious variant.

Confined for the third time, the country has embarked on a “race against time”, facing hospitals on the verge of saturation, to vaccinate by mid-February the over 70s, caregivers and patients. vulnerable people, i.e. around 15 million people belonging to a category of the population where 88% of deaths due to Covid-19 occur.

The vaccination campaign began in early December using the vaccines currently available, the BioNTech-Pfizer and the one designed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford.

The British health regulator gave the green light on Friday to a third vaccine, that of the American laboratory Moderna, but it will not begin to be used until the spring.

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