A record number of Victorians have had their COVID-19 jabs since the state's mass vaccination hubs opened

A daily record 6923 coronavirus jabs have been administered in Victoria since the state opened its vaccination hubs to everyone aged over 50.

People are seen lining up for their COVID-19 vaccination at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Monday, 3 May, 2021.

People are seen lining up for their COVID-19 vaccination at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Monday, 3 May, 2021. Source: AAP

Almost 7000 coronavirus jabs have been administered in Victoria since the state opened its vaccination hubs to everyone aged over 50.

Some 6923 vaccine doses were administered in the 24 hours to Tuesday morning across the state's 22 mass vaccination hubs, according to the health department.

The department said the number of reported doses was a 105 per cent increase on the same day last week.
More than 13,000 Victorians also called the state's booking hotline to make an appointment to have the jab.

The national vaccine rollout was expanded on Monday to include phase 2a, which includes anyone aged 50 or over as well as all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults aged between 18 and 49 years old.

Victoria's Acting Premier James Merlino said authorities had been preparing for weeks.

"The Department of Health have done a great job of getting ready to be at this point, which means that we could make that switch immediately and get going with thousands more (doses)," he told reporters.

"We can do even more subject to the supply of vaccine from the Commonwealth."
People lining up to get their COVID-19 vaccine at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Monday, 3 May, 2021.
People lining up to get their COVID-19 vaccine at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre on Monday, 3 May, 2021. Source: AAP
Mr Merlino also noted Victorians were likely to be keener than other Australians to get the vaccine, given the state endured the nation's only second wave of coronavirus infections.

The second wave resulted in thousands of cases, hundreds of deaths and a prolonged 112-day lockdown.

"The experience of Victorians in 2020, I think has meant we are really keen to make sure that we get vaccinated," Mr Merlino said.

"There's great enthusiasm to get vaccinated because we know that to get vaccinated is our quickest path to normality."

But he cautioned the pandemic will not be over until billions of people across the world are immunised.

"We are not out of this pandemic," he said.

"We're seeing it in the pretty catastrophic situation in India and other parts of the world."
Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton receives his first COVID-19 vaccination at the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne, Wednesday, April 21, 2021. (AAP Image/Luis Ascui) NO ARCHIVING
Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton receives his first COVID-19 vaccination at the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne, Wednesday, 21 April, 2021. Source: AAP
Victoria recorded its 67th consecutive day without a locally acquired coronavirus case on Tuesday, following 14,325 tests.

A returned traveller in hotel quarantine, however, tested positive for the virus, bringing the total number of active cases in the state to 21.


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2 min read
Published 4 May 2021 12:00pm
Updated 4 May 2021 12:37pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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