Spectators sob as co-creator of AstraZeneca jab receives spontaneous standing ovation at Wimbledon - Teenagers might need to be vaccinated to curtail Covid Winter wave says expert

Some spectators sobbed in the famous Centre Court in Wimbledon as the co-creator of the AstraZeneca vaccine, Dame Sarah Gilbert, received a spontaneous standing ovation.
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LIVE UPDATES: Coronavirus NI - Spectators sob as co-creator of AstraZeneca jab receives spontaneous standing ovation at Wimbledon

211 new infections in last 24 hours

There have been an additional 211 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Northern Ireland.

No further deaths have been reported in the past 24 hours. Sixteen patients are in hospital and two are in intensive care.

The latest vaccination figures show 2,010,028 jabs have been administered in the region in total.

Spectators sob as co-creator of AstraZeneca jab receives spontaneous standing ovation at Wimbledon

Medical professionals who helped develop the coronavirus vaccine were given a standing ovation on Centre Court ahead of the first match there at Wimbledon.

Organisers have issued hundreds of free tickets to key workers and other “inspirational individuals” by way of saying thank you for their “important work” during the coronavirus pandemic.

Guests of the Royal Box on Monday included Hannah Ingram Moore, daughter of veteran fundraiser Captain Sir Tom Moore and Dame Sarah Gilbert, who co-designed the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.

Sir Tom’s name was greeted with cheers and a round of applause and Ms Ingram-Moore smiled and waved.

Teenagers might need to be vaccinated to curtail Covid Winter wave says expert - Portugal latest EU country to impose quarantine on travellers from UK

Vaccinating teenagers may be needed to prevent a further Covid-19 outbreak this winter, one expert has suggested - writes Ella Pickover, PA Health Correspondent

At present the vaccination programme is only open to adults, and some children in exceptional circumstances.

But Professor Peter Openshaw, a member of the Nervtag advisory group, said that offering the vaccines more widely to those over the age of 12 could be key to “interrupting” the spread of the virus.

He told Sky News: “I think it’s quite likely, unless we do something pretty radical by way of interrupting the spread of this virus, that we will have to extend vaccination into teenagers in order to prevent a further outbreak in this coming winter and the following spring.

“I think we do know that (vaccines) are very effective at inducing an antibody response and they are safe – that has to be balanced against the relatively low risk of disease.

“The risk of disease is not zero and of course there are descriptions increasingly emerging of teenagers getting infected and then getting prolonged effects of so-called long Covid.”

He added: “The immune responses (between adults and teenagers) are pretty comparable and there was one study which suggested that there are different immune responses in teenagers but actually there’s other studies which show that, between the ages of 12 and 18, you respond pretty well the same as an adult.

“And I think that it looks very much as if the way that we need to interrupt this outbreak is to extend vaccination into those age groups.”

The issue has been focus of intense debate.

Some academics have said it would be morally wrong to offer vaccinations to children, who are at relatively low risk of Covid-19, while vulnerable people in other countries are yet to receive their first dose of vaccine.

Others have said it is is important to offer the jabs to teenagers to stem the spread of infection and prevent further disruption to education.

The UK’s medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), has approved the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine for use among children aged 12 and over.

But officials have not yet confirmed whether the vaccination programme will extend to children once the adult campaign is complete

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