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Sunday, July 13, 2025

Tobago expecting vaccines on February 25

by

Loyse Vincent
1607 days ago
20210217
General Manager Primary Care Services, TRHA, Dr Roxanne Mitchell.

General Manager Primary Care Services, TRHA, Dr Roxanne Mitchell.

Loyse Vin­cent

To­ba­go will re­ceive its first batch of COVID-19 vac­cines on Feb­ru­ary 25 and health of­fi­cials on the is­land say that there will be more than enough to pro­vide for those il­leg­i­ble on the is­land.

The in­for­ma­tion came from Gen­er­al Man­ag­er of Pri­ma­ry Care of the To­ba­go Re­gion­al Health Au­thor­i­ty Dr Rox­anne Mitchell who made the an­nounce­ment at the Di­vi­sion of Health Well­ness and Fam­i­ly De­vel­op­ment’s COVID-19 up­date press con­fer­ence yes­ter­day.

Ac­cord­ing to Dr Mitchell pri­or­i­ty will be giv­en to all “cadres of health­care and front­line work­ers and per­sons over 18. Adults with pre-ex­ist­ing con­di­tions and per­sons over 60 will al­so be giv­en pri­or­i­ty.”

She said dis­tri­b­u­tion of the vac­cine will take place at the Scar­bor­ough, Rox­bor­ough and Canaan health cen­tres at a rate of 50 peo­ple per day in the ini­tial stage.

The is­land has a ca­pac­i­ty to store 30,000 vials of the vac­cine which must be stored at 2-8 de­grees Cel­sius. Each vial con­tains 10 dos­es.

“Our tar­get pop­u­la­tion if you look at the groups for ex­emp­tion, we have an adult pop­u­la­tion of 45,000 per­sons across the is­land that means at any point in time we are look­ing at 90,000 dos­es. We have set our max­i­mum tar­get with re­gards to the num­ber of vac­cines that will be rolled out even­tu­al­ly.”

The Pri­ma­ry Care Health­care man­ag­er said a vac­ci­na­tion sched­ule will be post­ed fol­lowed by the roll­out of the first and sec­ond dose of the vac­cine four­teen days lat­er. The dis­tri­b­u­tion of the vac­cine will be im­ple­ment­ed by an elec­tron­i­cal­ly man­aged ap­point­ment sys­tem to en­sure that per­sons re­ceive both the first and sec­ond dose.

“We will send out pre-reg­is­tra­tion in­for­ma­tion so that per­sons may con­tact us vis text mes­sages what app mes­sages emails and phone calls in a bid to sched­ule ap­point­ments so that per­sons can re­ceive the vac­cine.”

She said like any oth­er pre-ex­ist­ing vac­ci­na­tions, sys­tems will al­so be put in place to mon­i­tor for and treat with peo­ple who may ex­pe­ri­ence side ef­fects of the vac­cine.

“Af­ter the first vac­cine we will have per­sons wait­ing 20-30 min­utes to see what whether or not they have had an acute re­ac­tion to the vac­cine what we call im­me­di­ate acute re­ac­tion any per­son who de­vel­ops such re­ac­tions will be med­ical­ly treat­ed ac­cord­ing­ly.”

She said the is­land’s med­ical staff is cur­rent­ly be­ing re­trained on prop­er vac­ci­na­tion and cold chain pro­ce­dures to en­sure op­ti­mal ef­fi­cien­cy. Health of­fi­cials on the is­land say they hope that there will be “pub­lic uptick of the vac­cine so we can be­gin open­ing up so­cial­ly and eco­nom­i­cal­ly.”

Ac­cord­ing to Dr Mitchell peo­ple un­der the age of 18, preg­nant women and per­sons liv­ing with HIV/AIDS will not be vac­ci­nat­ed.

As of Feb­ru­ary 15, To­ba­go has gone 19 days with no new COVID-19 cas­es and there are al­so no ac­tive cas­es on the is­land. The is­land record­ed 155 pos­i­tive cas­es and two deaths.


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