Africa News of Wednesday, 17 February 2021
Source: reuters.com
South Africa will administer its first COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday, with President Cyril Ramaphosa to get the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) shot alongside health workers.
The first shot will be given at Khayelitsha District Hospital in Cape Town this afternoon, the government said.
Ramaphosa said in a statement that 80,000 J&J doses were being prepared for distribution across the country and that he would be inoculated to demonstrate his government’s confidence in the vaccine.
The J&J vaccine is being rolled out initially as a research study to further evaluate it in the field, with up to 500,000 health workers set to be immunised.
Ramaphosa said most vaccination centres would be ready to begin the country’s immunisation programme on Wednesday.
“The Johnson & Johnson vaccine has been shown in extensive trials to be safe and efficacious and will protect our health care workers from illness and death from COVID-19,” he said.
Just took the vaccine! #WeChooseVaccination pic.twitter.com/ZkNg8jra4f
— Cyril Ramaphosa ???????? #StaySafe (@CyrilRamaphosa) February 17, 2021