mainly use staff that isn t from primary care. we were vaccinating yesterday. primary care. we were vaccinating yesterday, and we are setting up a seven yesterday, and we are setting up a seven day yesterday, and we are setting up a seven day a yesterday, and we are setting up a seven day a week, 12 hour a day service seven day a week, 12 hour a day service from seven day a week, 12 hour a day service from wednesday onwards, and, horrefully, service from wednesday onwards, and, hopefully, we originally planned to do about hopefully, we originally planned to do about 10,000 vaccines, we are now planning do about 10,000 vaccines, we are now planning to do about 10,000 vaccines, we are now planning to do 20,000 before the end of the planning to do 20,000 before the end of the year planning to do 20,000 before the end of the year. so, planning to do 20,000 before the end of the ear. ., ., ., , of the year. so, how long does it take, if of the year. so, how long does it
take them out of the normal processing line and put them in a different location so that we can have some isolation and have a little bit of extra time to make sure that everybody is safe and secure as possible. lita, that s a big be end or a little map description. it s a lot more complicated than that. we refined this process over the last ten days. as you can well imagine, if we wind up in situations that we re backed up with evacuees at certain locations, if the screening process is too exorbitant, too slow, we can wind up having serious problems. when we initially started operations in europe, our average wait time in the processing line put us in a position where we could process about 60 folks per hour. today we possess the capability to process 250 folks per hour and that has a lot to do with the improvement in the software with respect to our biometric
ireland, but the ptsd i will have from this last week is worse than either of those deployments because people are getting trampled. i heard another story from a u.s. soldier, a woman trampled almost to death last night while we were sitting, waiting in a processing line for about five hours. we sawmill tri vehicle come streaking through with a newborn baby and we chased after it and later we found out that the newborn baby had sun stroke and dehydration, and they had to rush it for medical care. the baby is okay. but let me tell you, there are so many babies. there s a u.s. military vehicle there. this is a sort of holding area here where there are a lot of people, and there are several of these holding areas. they ve been standing, waiting here for, i don t know, about three hours. it s very hot. there s no shade.
that s your best hope is to try to throw your baby to a soldier to get them out, to save them from being crushed, to give them a better future? and i think there is nothing that illustrates better the panic, the chaos, the fear than that description. i talked to another british soldier who started talking to me and he just started weeping. he said i ve down two tours in hellman s, but the ptsd i will have from this last week is worse than either of those deployments because people are getting trampled. i heard another story from a u.s. soldier, a woman trampled almost to death last night while we were sitting waiting in a processing line for about five hours. we saw military vehicles come streaking through with a newborn baby. and we chased after it. later we found out that the newborn baby had sunstroke and dehydration. they had to rush it to medical