
COVID: Royal Navy Personnel Administer Vaccines In Bath

Royal Navy personnel were among those administering COVID-19 jabs at Bath Racecourse, which has become a mass vaccination centre.
Hundreds of people received their first dose of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine at the site on Wednesday – the first day that it was open to members of the public.
The centre will be open seven days a week and is for people currently eligible for a vaccine who live within a 45-minute drive of the site.
Anne Williams, clinical nurse manager at the vaccination centre, said: "It’s an amazing thing for us to do.
"I think it’s what nurses are all about, we can do something positive and we can make a difference and we’re seeing that now in action so it’s great.
"We’re all doing 12-hour shifts but we’re all happy to do it."
Ms Williams said it had been "a lot of work" transforming the site into an equipped mass vaccination centre which is aiming to administer 900 doses per day by next week.

When asked about Royal Navy personnel joining the effort for four days, she said they’d been a great help.
"They’ve got such a great spirit and the public loves having them here so that’s been a real bonus for us."
The personnel at the site are part of the Vaccines Quick Reaction Force which is made up of medically trained service members from all three branches of the military.
They’re deployed to sites when required and requested by the NHS in a surge capacity.
There are 21 Quick Reaction Force teams in total, three for each of the seven NHS regions.
George McClean, 78, a retired construction worker, received his COVID-19 vaccine at Bath Racecourse on Wednesday along with wife Angela, also 78.
"It’s brilliant, I’m feeling great. I never even felt the injection," Mr McClean said.
He added he was looking forward to "living a normal life" in the future.
Cover image: Royal Navy service member prepares to give a coronavirus vaccine (Picture: PA).