Australia doubles Pfizer vaccine order as Astra clotting worries upend rollout

  • 3 years   ago
Australia doubles Pfizer vaccine order as Astra clotting worries upend rollout
SYDNEY -Australia has doubled its order of the Pfizer Inc COVID-19 vaccine, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday, as the country raced to overhaul its inoculation plan over concerns about the risks of blood clots with the AstraZeneca Plc vaccine.
 
Until late Thursday, Australia based its vaccination programme largely on an AstraZeneca shot, with an order for 50 million doses - enough for the required two shots for its entire 25 million population - to be made domestically by biopharma CSL Ltd.
 
But Australia has now joined a host of countries in restricting use of the vaccine due to clotting concerns. Local health authorities have changed their recommendation to say the country’s nearly 12 million people aged under 50 should take the Pfizer product instead.
 
As a result Australia has doubled an earlier Pfizer order to 40 million shots, enough for four-fifths of the population, which would be delivered by the end of the year, Morrison said.
 
The policy change to Pfizer effectively ends plans to have the entire population vaccinated by the end of October.
 
“It is not a prohibition on the AstraZeneca vaccine,” Morrison told reporters in Canberra after a national cabinet meeting to discuss the virus response.
 
“For those who are over 50, there is a strong encouragement to be taking this AstraZeneca vaccine.”
 
After Australia opened a quarantine-free travel zone with neighbouring New Zealand, Morrison said he hoped to make similar arrangements elsewhere in the region, and “the more Australians who are vaccinated, the more likelihood there is of being able to have the types of arrangements that I mentioned”.
 
Health Secretary Brendan Murphy called the policy change “highly precautionary” given the low rates of possible adverse effects associated with the AstraZeneca shot.
 
More than a dozen countries have at one time suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, but most have resumed, with some, including France, the Netherlands and Germany, recommending a minimum age.
 
Australia’s most populous state New South Wales, home to nearly a third of the population, said it was pausing the AstraZeneca rollout to update “informed consent” documents to notify patients of risks.
 
Before the updated Pfizer order was announced, AstraZeneca said it respected the Australian decision and was working with regulators around the world “to understand the individual cases, epidemiology and possible mechanisms that could explain these extremely rare events”.
 
CSL said it remained committed to meeting its contracted arrangements to make the vaccine.
 
 
 
Reporting by Byron Kaye, with additional reporting by Praveen Menon in Wellington; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Michael Perry/ Reuters

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