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The Ministry of Health published the complete coronavirus vaccination schedule for the second week of March.
According to the health authority, the national campaign will continue as follows:
- Monday March 8, persons with comorbidities between 58 and 59 years and people with a disability (severe or profound) between 58 and 59 years old.
- Tuesday March 9, persons with comorbidities between 56 and 57 years and people with a disability (severe or profound) between 56 and 57 years old.
- Wednesday March 10, persons with comorbidities between 54 and 55 years and people with a disability (severe or profound) between 54 and 55 years old.
- Thursday March 11, people with comorbidities between 50 and 53 years and people with a disability (severe or profound) between 50 and 53 years old.
- Friday March 12, persons with comorbidities between 46 and 49 years and people with a disability (severe or profound) between 46 and 49 years old.
- Saturday March 13, laggards of the week.
- Sunday March 14, laggards of the week.
It should be noted that associated with those dates also the injection of the second dose will continue for the first vaccinated.
This is the calendar for the week between Monday, March 8 and Friday, March 12, which includes: People with comorbidities and people with severe or profound disabilities between 46 and 59 years old, and the second doses of people already inoculated are incorporated. pic.twitter.com/j2v5pPoMhz
– I Vacuno @MinisterioSalud (@MeVacuno) March 3, 2021
The morbidities considered are:
- Disease chronic lung (bronchial asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis, pulmonary fibrosis, tuberculosis under treatment)
- Disease neurological (congenital or acquired neuromuscular, which determines swallowing disorders or the management of respiratory secretions, refractory epilepsy under treatment)
- Disease chronic kidney (stage 4 or higher kidney failure, dialysis)
- Disease chronic liver (cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis, liver disease)
- Diseases metabolic (diabetes mellitus, congenital metabolic diseases)
- Heart disease (congenital, rheumatic, ischemic, and cardiomyopathies of any cause)
- Hypertension blood pressure in drug treatment.
- Obesity (BMI> 30 in adults and adolescents BMI> +2 SD)
- Autoimmune disease (lupus, scleroderma, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, and others)
- Cancer in treatment with radiotherapy, chemotherapy, hormonal therapies or palliative measures of any kind
- Immunodeficiencies (congenital or acquired), people living with HIV on ART with a CD4> 200 cells / mm3 and a viral load of less than 1,000 copies.
Undersecretary Paula Daza explained that people with morbidities must “show a document, issued by a doctor, proving that you have a chronic disease“
“The most frequent, such as hypertension and diabetes, are in the Explicit Health Guarantees, the GES, so you can present a document that is in GES or a health control certificate that presents a chronic disease,” he added.
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