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Refugees distressed after St Vincent s Care Services decision to demolish Eltham units

Refugees Hanaa and Mouna have found a safe community in suburban Melbourne. Now a decision by St Vincent's Care Services to decommission their housing has left them fearful about the future.

Post Courier Refugees distressed after decision to demolish Eltham units

Aged care residents are OK after Covid vaccine overdose

The CEO of Health Australia has resigned after one of the company s doctors gave two aged care residents four times the correct dose of the Covid-19 vaccine. A 94-year-old woman and an 88-year-old man were given too much of the Pfizer vaccine on Tuesday, the second day of Australia s vaccination rollout, at Holy Spirit aged care home in Carseldine, Brisbane. Both were admitted to hospital for observation but have suffered no adverse effects. The woman has been returned to the home while the man remains in hospital for an unrelated elective surgery.  The two elderly people given an incorrect dose of the Pfizer vaccine re residents at the Holy Spirit Nursing Home Carseldine in Brisbane (pictured)

Australian company behind Covid vaccine bungle is put on notice

The boss of an Australian contractor at the centre a Covid vaccine overdose bungle at a nursing home has stood down. A 94-year-old woman and an 88-year-old man were given too much of the Pfizer vaccine on Tuesday, the second day of Australia s vaccination rollout, at Holy Spirit aged care home at Carseldine, Queensland. Healthcare Australia, a company contracted by the federal government to give vaccines in aged care homes, was put on notice after an investigation found the doctor who administered the jab had not completed immunisation training.  The doctor has since been stood down from the vaccination program, and on Thursday afternoon was joined by Haelthcare Australia chief executive Jason Cartwrigth.

Don t worry, come forward : Asian nations get 1st shots

Here’s a look at major developments: SOUTH KOREA South Korea’s top infectious disease experts warned that vaccines will not bring the disease to a quick end and called for continued vigilance in social distancing and mask wearing as the country prepares to give its first shots on Friday. Jeong Eun-kyeong, director of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency, said Wednesday it would take a “considerably long time” before the mass vaccination campaign brings the virus under control. ADVERTISEMENT The country aims to vaccinate more than 70% of the population by November. But a safe return to a life without masks is highly unlikely this year, considering various factors including the growing spread of virus variants, said Choi Won Suk, an infectious disease professor at the Korea University Ansan Hospital.

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