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Professor warns Ireland will be nowhere near widespread vaccination by April

He said 1.25 million doses will have been administered by the end of March - then one million doses on average per month between April and June. That will mean up to 40% of people over 18 will have received their first dose by the end of April, up to 64% by the end of May, and up to 82% by end of June. But Prof Ryan said: Even with the most ambitious targets by Micheál Martin - which are based on optimistic supply - we might have half the population having a single dose of the vaccine by the middle of June . Having half the population vaccinated by April, I don t think that s realistic.”

Coronavirus: Ireland will be nowhere near widespread vaccination by April - Ryan

Share this article The associate professor in the School of Biochemistry and Immunology at Trinity College Dublin COVID is on it s way out, but it could be a longer time than we think. We re talking about coming out of this lockdown in early April or late April: we will have nowhere near widespread vaccination by that point in time. If we come out of this lockdown and we don t have low enough case numbers, we can easily be heading quickly towards a fourth wave if - with this new variant - there s too much of it in the population . Host Ciara Kelly said Ireland is projected to have 1.25 million vaccine doses given by the end of March, and over two million by the end of April.

This third wave is the worst by far We are just on the edge right now - inside Ireland s hospitals

On Wednesday, St Vincent s had the dubious honour of caring for more Covid patients than any other hospital in the country. Its services are coping but are stretched to its limits, explains Prof Ryan. Essentially, our ICU is full right now. We don t have spare ICU beds. Some could be facilitated if needs be but that s not an ideal situation. It used to be that we all knew someone who had Covid. Now, we all know of someone who died. The next thing, unfortunately, could be that we all know someone in our own family who died. Nphet s grim evening roll-call of Covid infection rates and deaths are now part and parcel of daily life for us all. But for medics on the frontline, the statistics mean much more than just a stark reminder of the seriousness of Covid-19.

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