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COVID-19 vaccination in the Republic of Ireland

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COVID-19 vaccination in the Republic of Ireland
Date29 December 2020–present
LocationRepublic of Ireland
CauseCOVID-19 pandemic
Organised by
Participants
  • 1,159,083 first doses[1]
  • 445,561 second doses[1]
  • 1,604,644 total doses[1]
Outcome23.65% of the Irish population has received at least one dose
WebsiteGov.ie – COVID-19 Vaccine

COVID-19 vaccination in the Republic of Ireland began on 29 December 2020,[2][3] in response to the ongoing pandemic in the Republic of Ireland. As of 2 May 2021, 1,159,083 people had received the first dose of a vaccine and 445,561 had received their second dose, bringing the total of vaccines administered to 1,604,644.[1]

Vaccines[edit]

History[edit]

On 1 December 2020, the Government of Ireland approved an advance purchase agreement for 875,000 doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.[4][5][6]

On 15 December, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly announced the Government's National COVID-19 Vaccination Strategy, which outlines the country's high-level plan for safe, effective and efficient vaccination of the Republic of Ireland, while safeguarding continued provision of health and social care services.[7][8][9]

Timeline[edit]

On St Stephen's Day, the first shipment of 10,000 Pfizer–BioNTech vaccines arrived in the country.[10][11][12]

Annie Lynch, a 79-year-old woman, became the first person in the Republic of Ireland to receive the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine at St. James's Hospital, Dublin on 29 December 2020,[13][14][15] and received the second dose three weeks later on Tuesday 19 January 2021.[16]

Maura Byrne, a 95-year-old woman, became the first nursing home resident in the Republic of Ireland to receive the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine on 5 January 2021,[17] while Dr Eavan Muldoon, an infectious diseases consultant, became the first healthcare worker in the Mater University Hospital to receive the vaccine.[18] On the same day, Taoiseach Micheál Martin announced that up to 135,000 people would be vaccinated nationwide by the end of February 2021.[19]

Following the approval of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine by the European Medicines Agency on 6 January 2021, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar announced that the vaccine would allow 10,000 more people in Ireland to be vaccinated per week.[20][21][22]

The rollout of the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine in private and voluntary nursing homes began nationwide on 7 January, with 22 nursing homes of 3,000 residents and staff to be vaccinated.[23][24][25]

The first shipment of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine arrived in the Republic of Ireland on 12 January.[26][27]

Around 1,800 healthcare workers received the Moderna vaccine at three mass vaccination centres that opened in Dublin, Galway and Portlaoise on 16 January.[28][29][30]

On 17 January, the Government requested early deliveries of the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine as discussions to secure early delivery of the vaccine got underway.[31][32][33] The first shipment of 21,600 AstraZeneca vaccines arrived in the country on 6 February.[34][35][36]

On 24 February, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly announced that Ireland had ordered enough vaccines to vaccinate 10.3 million people with 18.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines ordered.[37][38][39]

On 6 March, Taoiseach Micheál Martin announced that Ireland had reached the milestone of half a million COVID-19 vaccines administered.[40][41][42]

On 10 March, Taoiseach Micheál Martin confirmed that Ireland was to receive a further 46,500 doses of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine before the end of March.[43][44][45]

On 14 March, the administration of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine was suspended in Ireland by the National Immunisation Advisory Committee (NIAC) as a precautionary measure following concerns over serious blood clots in Norway.[46][47][48] On 19 March, the NIAC recommended that the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine could continue to be used in Ireland following approval from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on 18 March.[49][50][51]

On 8 April, the CEO of the Health Service Executive (HSE) Paul Reid announced that Ireland had reached the milestone of one million COVID-19 vaccines administered.[52][53][54] On the same day, the Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) began an investigation after the first case of a very rare blood clot in the brain of a person after vaccination with the AstraZeneca vaccine was confirmed in a 40-year-old Dublin woman.[55][56][57]

On 12 April, following a lengthy meeting, the National Immunisation Advisory Committee (NIAC) recommend that only people over 60 years of age should get the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine and that a second dose of the vaccine should not be given to anyone who developed unusual blood clots with low platelets after the first dose.[58][59][60]

On 15 April, over 26,000 people registered for a COVID-19 vaccination after the online portal for 69-year-olds went live.[61][62][63]

On 25 April, Taoiseach Micheál Martin announced that Ireland had reached the milestone of one million first doses of COVID-19 vaccines administered.[64][65][66]

Vaccines on order[edit]

Vaccine Doses ordered Approval Deployment
Pfizer–BioNTech 5.4 million Green check.svg 21 December 2020[67] Green check.svg 29 December 2020[13]
Moderna 0.88 million Green check.svg 6 January 2021[68] Green check.svg 16 January 2021[28]
Oxford–AstraZeneca 3.3 million Green check.svg 29 January 2021[69] Green check.svg 8 February 2021[70]
Janssen J&J 2.2 million Green check.svg 11 March 2021[71] Pending
CureVac 2.5 million Pending Pending
Novavax 1.1 million Pending Pending
Valneva 0.33 million Pending Pending
Sanofi–GSK Pending Pending

Organisations involved[edit]

A High-Level Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccination was established on 11 November 2020 to oversee the roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines in the country once they were approved by the statutory authorities,[72] and to support the Department of Health and Health Service Executive (HSE) to deliver a COVID-19 immunisation programme that meets best practice and provides good governance.[73] The first full meeting of the task force took place on 23 November 2020 and was chaired by Professor Brian MacCraith.[74]

The National Immunisation Advisory Committee (an independent body outside of the HSE) provides expert, evidence-based and impartial guidance about the COVID-19 vaccines to the Chief Medical Officer in the Department of Health.[75][76]

Members of the Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccination[edit]

Members of the High-Level Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccination is made up of senior representatives from the Department of Health, the Health Service Executive, the Health Products Regulatory Authority, the Office of the Government Chief Information Officer, the Office of Government Procurement, IDA Ireland, the Dublin Airport Authority, the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment and the Department of the Taoiseach.[77][78][79]

Member Role
Brian MacCraith Chair of the High-Level Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccination
Elizabeth Canavan Chair, Senior Officials Group on COVID-19
Tony Holohan Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health
Fergal Goodman Assistant Secretary, Department of Health
Paul Reid Director-General, Health Service Executive (HSE)
Colm Henry Chief Clinical Officer, Health Service Executive
Barry Lowry Chief Information Officer, Office of the Government Chief Information Officer
Paul Quinn Government CPO and CEO, Office of Government Procurement
Martin Shanahan Chief Executive Officer, IDA Ireland
Dermot Mulligan Assistant Secretary, Innovation and Investment Division, Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment
Dalton Philips Chief Executive of the Dublin Airport Authority (DAA)
Lorraine Nolan Chief Executive, Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA)
Rachel Kenna Chief Nursing Officer, Department of Health
Derek McCormack Expert on Cold Chain Logistics

In attendance[edit]

Lorraine Doherty National Clinical Director Health Protection, Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC)
Sean Bresnan National Director of Procurement at Health Service Executive
Gerry O'Brien Acting Director, Health Protection Division, Department of Health
Deirdre Watters Head of Communications, Department of Health
Kate Waterhouse Secretary, High-Level Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccination
Ronan Glynn Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health

Rollout schedule[edit]

Phases[edit]

Under the Government's National COVID-19 Vaccination Strategy, the vaccines will be rolled out in three phases:[80][8][81]

Plan Stage 1. Initial Roll-Out → 2. Mass Ramp-Up → 3. Open Access
Vaccine availability Limited doses available Large number of doses available Large number of doses available
Vaccination sites used Long-term care facilities, large scale healthcare sites Mass vaccination centres, GPs and pharmacies Mass vaccination centres, GPs and pharmacies

Vaccine priority groups[edit]

The COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation Strategy currently includes 9 priority groups for the vaccine rollout in Ireland.[82]

On 23 February, following the publication of the Government's new revised Living with COVID-19 plan called "The Path Ahead", Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly announced an update to the COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation Strategy with people aged between 16 and 69 who are at very high risk of developing severe COVID-19 moved up the priority list, after the National Public Health Emergency Team endorsed recommendations by the National Immunisation Advisory Committee.[83][84][85]

On 30 March, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly announced an update to the COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation Strategy with priority groups being changed to an age-based system after vulnerable people with underlying conditions were vaccinated.[86][87][88]

Ireland's COVID-19 vaccination programme[89]
January–March April–May May–July
1. 2. 3.
  • People aged over 80
  • Frontline healthcare workers
  • People aged over 65 in long-term care facilities
  • People aged 65–79
  • People at high or very high risk
  • Key vaccination workers
  • Other vulnerable groups
  • Everyone aged 18–64
Order Priority group Progress
1 People aged 65 years and older who are residents of long-term care facilities In progress
2 Frontline healthcare workers
3 People aged 70 and older
4 People aged 16–69 whose medical condition puts them at very high risk of severe disease and death
5 People aged 65–69 whose underlying condition puts them at a high risk of severe disease and death
6 Other people aged 65–69, other healthcare workers not in direct patient contact, and key workers
7 People aged 16–64 whose underlying condition puts them at high risk of severe disease and death In progress
8 Residents of long-term care facilities aged 18–64
9 People aged 64 years and younger, and people aged 16–64 living or working in crowded settings
  • 55–64 years
  • 45–54 years
  • 35–44 years
  • 25–34 years
  • 16–24 years

Last updated on 31 March 2021.

"People who have an underlying condition that puts them at high risk of severe disease and death" is defined as:[90]

Progress to date[edit]

Vaccination status of the Irish population as of 2 May 2021

  Unvaccinated population: ~3,744,917 people (76.42%)
  Partially vaccinated[a]: 713,522 people (14.56%)
  Fully vaccinated: 445,561 people (9.09%)

Total doses administered by vaccine type as of 2 May 2021

  Pfizer–BioNTech (1,139,453) (71%)
  Oxford–AstraZeneca (385,429) (24.01%)
  Moderna (79,762) (4.97%)
Vaccinations figures for December 2020 to April 2021 (Updated weekly)[1]
Date 1st dose 2nd dose Total vaccinations % of population per dose
31 December 2020 1,800+[91] 0.03%
4 January 2021 4,000[92] 0.08%
7 January 2021 15,314[93] 0.31%
13 January 2021 77,303[94] 1.58%
17 January 2021 94,000[95] 1.89%
20 January 2021 121,900[96] 2.45%
24 January 2021 143,000[97] 3.0%
27 January 2021 147,700 13,800 161,500[98] 3.01% (1st) 0.28% (2nd)
31 January 2021 150,500 49,300 199,800[99] 3.07% (1st) 1.01% (2nd)
3 February 2021 152,200 67,000 219,200 3.1% (1st) 1.36% (2nd)
10 February 2021 166,863 89,818 256,681 3.4% (1st) 1.83% (2nd)
17 February 2021 197,609 113,291 310,900 4.03% (1st) 2.31% (2nd)
24 February 2021 254,948 136,407 391,355 5.2% (1st) 2.78% (2nd)
3 March 2021 328,598 146,047 474,645 6.7% (1st) 2.98% (2nd)
10 March 2021 409,662 160,729 570,391 8.36% (1st) 3.28% (2nd)
17 March 2021 468,328 171,258 639,586 9.55% (1st) 3.49% (2nd)
24 March 2021 529,984 202,694 732,678 10.81% (1st) 4.13% (2nd)
31 March 2021 619,003 246,457 865,460 12.63% (1st) 5.02% (2nd)
7 April 2021 716,636 301,628 1,018,264 14.62% (1st) 6.15% (2nd)
14 April 2021 789,526 331,477 1,121,003 16.11% (1st) 6.76% (2nd)
21 April 2021 904,774 371,054 1,275,828 18.46% (1st) 7.57% (2nd)
28 April 2021 1,067,378 419,665 1,487,043 21.78% (1st) 8.56% (2nd)
Cohort breakdown of vaccines administered
Cohort 1st dose 2nd dose Total cohort
Cohort 1[b] 109,349 84,732 194,081
Cohort 2[c] 256,044 95,891 351,935
Cohort 3[d] 455,228 259,151 714,379
Cohort 4[e] 202,400 5,697 208,097
Cohort 5[f] 128,385 38 128,423
Cohort 7[g] 1,332 2 1,334

Vaccination centres[edit]

Up to 40 large vaccination centres were put in place across the country to administer COVID-19 vaccines.[100]

Major facilities were put in place in Cork, Dublin, Waterford, Sligo, Galway, Limerick and Athlone, with smaller centres in Mullingar, Longford, Ennis, Nenagh, Bantry and Tralee.[101][102][103] Three GP-run vaccination centres were also put in place across the country, with The Helix at Dublin City University the first to be established, vaccinating 5,000 people a day.[104][105][106] Cork City Hall, Páirc Uí Chaoimh GAA grounds and Munster Technological University's Bishopstown campus were transformed into mass vaccination centres, administering 10,000 shots a day.[107][108][109]

Large venues such as sports stadia, GAA clubs, hotels, conference centres and arenas were used as mass vaccination centres across all counties in Ireland.[110][111][112]

The Helix at Dublin City University, one of three GP-run vaccination centres.
Athlone IT Arena vaccination centre.
Cork City Hall vaccination centre.

Locations[edit]

On 15 February, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly confirmed locations for 37 vaccination centres across all counties as part of the country's COVID-19 vaccination programme.[113][114][115]

On 20 February, nearly 1,000 patients over the age of 85 received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine at the country's first mass vaccination centre at The Helix in Dublin City University.[116][117][118]

Vaccination centre locations in the Republic of Ireland.
Location of vaccination centres in the Republic of Ireland
Centre County
Carlow IT Carlow
Kilmore Hotel Cavan
West County Hotel, Ennis Clare
Bantry Primary Care Centre Cork
City Hall, Cork Cork
Páirc Uí Chaoimh Cork
Clonakilty GAA Club Cork
MTU Cork, Bishopstown Cork
Mallow GAA Club Cork
Letterkenny IT Donegal
Aviva Stadium Dublin
Citywest Convention Centre Dublin
Croke Park Dublin
The Helix, DCU Dublin
Punchestown Racecourse Dublin
Ballybrit Racecourse Galway
MTU Kerry, Tralee Kerry
Killarney Sports & Leisure Centre Kerry
Cillin Hill Conference Centre Kilkenny
Midlands Park Hotel, Port Laoise Laois
Primary Care Unit, Carrick-on-Shannon, Leitrim
Radisson Hotel Limerick
Clonguish GAA Club, Newtownforbes Longford
Fairways Hotel, Dundalk Louth
Simmonstown GAA Club, Navan Meath
Breaffy House Resort, Castlebar Mayo
Hillgrove Hotel Monaghan
Tullamore Court Hotel Offaly
Abbey Hotel Roscommon
Sligo IT Sligo
Abbeycourt Hotel, Nenagh Tipperary
Clonmel Park Hotel Tipperary
Waterford IT Arena Waterford
Athlone IT Arena Westmeath
Bloomfield House Hotel, Mullingar Westmeath
Riverside Hotel, Enniscorthy Wexford
Arklow Bay Hotel Wicklow
Shoreline Leisure Centre, Greystones Wicklow

Controversies[edit]

On 26 March, the Labour Party leader Alan Kelly called for the chief executive of the Beacon Hospital to resign after it gave 20 leftover COVID-19 vaccines to a number of teachers and staff at a private secondary school in Bray, County Wicklow on 23 March.[119][120][121] One day later on 27 March, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly requested the Health Service Executive (HSE) to suspend vaccine operations at the Beacon Hospital following the controversy.[122][123][124]

On 30 March, a decision by the Government to overhaul the allocation of COVID-19 vaccines to an age-based system sparked anger and concern among teachers' unions and key workers.[125] The new change meant that key workers in essential jobs and the education sector who couldn't avoid a high risk of exposure to the virus would lose vaccine prioritisation.[126] Ireland's largest teaching union, the Irish National Teachers' Organisation (INTO), strongly criticised moves to change the vaccination rollout plan stating it was "extremely concerned" by the news, while the Teachers' Union of Ireland (TUI) echoed concerns and called for urgent engagement with the Department of Education.[127][128][129] The Association of Secondary Teachers, Ireland (ASTI) stated it was "shocked and dismayed" by the changes and claimed the decision was "totally at odds" with the objective to keep schools open, while the president of the Garda Representative Association (GRA) described the change as "a sucker punch" to their members, and that the decision "downgraded" the work of Gardaí and disregarded the risks they took while policing the pandemic.[130][131][132] On 7 April, the three teacher unions voted for an emergency motion backing industrial action, up to and including strike action, if they were not prioritised for vaccination.[133][134][135]

On 1 April, an independent review of the COVID-19 vaccination programme at the Coombe Hospital found that a consultant brought two leftover vaccine doses home to administer them to two family members.[136][137][138]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Partially vaccinated means persons with 1st but not yet 2nd dose.
  2. ^ Cohort 1 includes people aged 65 years and older, who are residents of long-term care facilities.
  3. ^ Cohort 2 includes frontline healthcare workers.
  4. ^ Cohort 3 includes people aged 70 years and older.
  5. ^ Cohort 4 includes people aged 16–69 and at very high risk of severe COVID-19 disease.
  6. ^ Cohort 5 includes people aged 65–69 whose underlying condition puts them at a high risk of severe disease and death.
  7. ^ Cohort 7 includes people aged 16–64 with an underlying condition that puts them at high risk of severe disease and death.

References[edit]

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External links[edit]