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The figure, which would have been reflected in a document from the Ministry of Health, indicates that there will be 50,000 doses of the vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech that will arrive in the country on February 18 to begin vaccination, reported that media.
A week later, on February 27, another batch of 50,000 doses would arrive that would be applied to the same number of people, so February would end with 100,000 inoculated with this vaccine for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, continues Blu.
Although that media indicates that a still indeterminate number of doses of AstraZeneca and Oxford are also expected to arrive, and possibly some from the Chinese Sinovac, the numbers seem too far from the goal of 850,000 vaccinated that had raised Duke the day you announced the date of the start of vaccination.
Even the Minister of Health, Fernando Ruiz, had spoken of the same figure before, revealing what he called “a tentative projection” of vaccines that would arrive each month. Last January 12, the head of Health also said that 850,000 doses would be available in February.
Where will the first vaccines go in Colombia?
Blu also explained that the distribution of the first doses will be “proportional to the population of the country’s cities.” In that sense, Bogotá would get the most, with about 7,700.
Medellín, for its part, would have about 2,500, Cali will have 2,200, Barranquilla will receive 1,273 (on February 19) and Boyacá will go 1,336. Then the cities that already have freezing mechanisms will follow, the information added.
Those first vaccines, the station said, will be applied first to health workers, while those that come from AstraZeneca will be those that apply to people over 80 years of age, which are also in the first stage of vaccination.