'Annual booster vaccines likely in Aus for foreseeable future'

By IANS | Published: November 7, 2021 03:06 PM2021-11-07T15:06:06+5:302021-11-07T15:20:07+5:30

Canberra, Nov 7 Austral will require annual Covid-19 booster vaccines for the foreseeable future, the nation's peak pharmacists ...

'Annual booster vaccines likely in Aus for foreseeable future' | 'Annual booster vaccines likely in Aus for foreseeable future'

'Annual booster vaccines likely in Aus for foreseeable future'

Canberra, Nov 7 Austral will require annual Covid-19 booster vaccines for the foreseeable future, the nation's peak pharmacists body said on Sunday.

Pharmacy Guild president Trent Twomey said annual booster vaccines will be necessary "for the foreseeable future" to protect Austral from the virus, reports Xinhua news agency.

"The question is what booster and what interval we need to get that booster, whether it's every six, nine or 12 months. Those decisions need to be based on evidence and facts and at the moment that is an evolving space," he was quoted by Nine Entertainment newspapers as saying on Sunday.

"In time we will treat Covid like many other viruses that have been around for decades, and a Covid-19 shot will just be another element of the Australian vaccination program."

From Monday any Australian who has their second coronavirus vaccine at least six months ago will be eligible for a third booster shot.

So far about 89.3 per cent of Austral aged 16 and over have received one vaccine dose and 80.5 per cent were fully inoculated, according to the Department of Health.

On Sunday, Australia reported more than 1,400 new locally-acquired Covid-19 cases and 10 deaths as the country continues to battle the third wave of infections.

Polling conducted for the Pharmacy Guild found that 57 per cent of Austral who do not intend to get vaccinated cited long-term side effects as a reason.

"These people aren't necessarily anti-vaxxers, they are hesitant. We need to communicate with these people differently, it can't be emotive, it has to be factual," Twomey said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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