Doctors and NHS bosses who ran the London Nightingale field hospital have defended its creation but admitted that it lacked the full range of medical expertise needed to treat Covid-19.
They admit that it “remains moot” whether the facility, set up last spring as a 3,500-bed critical care unit, was the best way of treating people left seriously ill by the disease or a good use of scarce NHS staff and equipment.
Quick guide Vaccines: how effective is each one and how many has the UK ordered?
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Pfizer/BioNTech
Country US/Germany
Efficacy 95% a week after the second shot. Pfizer says it is only 52% after the first dose but the UK’s Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) says this may rise to 90% after 21 days.
The UK has ordered 40m doses and is rolling them out now
Doses Clinical trials involved two doses 21 days apart. The UK is stretching this to 12 weeks.
Oxford/AstraZeneca
Country UK
Efficacy 70.4% 14 days after receiving the second dose. May have up to 90% efficacy when given as a half dose followed by a full dose. No severe disease or hospitalisations in anyone who received the vaccine.
The UK has ordered 100m doses and has begun distribution
Doses Two, four to 12 weeks apart
Moderna
Country US
Efficacy Phase 3 trial results suggest an rating of 94.1%.
The UK has ordered 17m doses, to be delivered in March or April
Doses Two, 28 days apart
Novavax
Country US
Efficacy Phase 3 trials suggest 89.3%.
60m doses ordered by the UK, with distribution expected principally in the second half of the year
Doses Two
Janssen (part of Johnson & Johnson)
Country US
Efficacy 72% in preventing mild to moderate cases in US trials but 66% efficacy observed in international trials. 85% efficacy against severe illness, and 100% protection against hospitalisation and death.
30m doses ordered by the UK
Doses: One, making it unique among Covid vaccines with phase 3 results so far
Photograph: Stéphane Mahé/X02520
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And they suggest that Covid’s complexity means patients should in future be treated in normal hospitals, rather than makeshift facilities such as the Nightingale, so they can get the specialist help they need.
It was the first of seven Nightingale hospitals to be set up around England to help manage the huge extra pressure the pandemic piled on the NHS. It was opened by Prince Charles in the ExCeL arena in London’s Docklands to a blaze of publicity and at the time was widely hailed as a potential masterstroke in the battle to save lives.
However, it only ever treated 54 patients, was hamstrung by hospitals’ reluctance to release doctors and nurses to work there and was derided by some in the NHS as a costly gimmick.
The doctors’ reflections, in a paper in the medical journal Intensive Care Medicine, are the first time that the medics and senior NHS figures who set up and ran the Nightingale have given details of its achievements and limitations.
They disclose that almost half (48.1%) of the 54 patients died, 20 while they were being treated there and six more after they had returned to a critical care unit near their home. That is in line with the 47.7% death rate seen at the time among Covid patients in hospital-based intensive care units.
All of the 54 patients were on a ventilator. Those who survived their spell at the ExCeL typically spent 34.5 days in critical care, far longer than the 12-day average seen among equivalent patients in hospital ICUs. That may have been because the Nightingale was unable to give patients a tracheostomy – in which an incision is made in a patient’s neck and a tube put into their windpipe – the authors say.
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