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90-Year-Old Grandmother Becomes First Person In The World To Get Approved Covid-19 Vaccine

90-Year-Old Grandmother Becomes First Person In The World To Get Approved Covid-19 Vaccine

Hospital staff formed a guard of honour and clapped Margaret Keenan after she got the jab.

Stewart Perrie

Stewart Perrie

A massive milestone has been reached in the fight against the coronavirus with an elderly grandmother becoming the first in the world to receive an approved vaccine.

Margaret Keenan, 90, has been immunised with the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 virus, and she's done it with gusto.

The grandmother from Northern Ireland was administered with the first jab at 6.31am by NHS nurse May Parsons at a hospital in Coventry.

Mrs Keenan - known as Maggie to her mates - will be 91 next week and only retired from her position at a jewellery shop four years ago.

Naturally, she's glad to have been given the vaccine and hopes that it will allow her to see more of her friends and family, including her daughter, son and four grandchildren.

She said: "I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against Covid-19, it's the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the New Year after being on my own for most of the year.

"I can't thank May and the NHS staff enough who have looked after me tremendously, and my advice to anyone offered the vaccine is to take it - if I can have it at 90 then you can have it too."

PA
The chief executive of NHS England has also reserved praise for those involved in rolling out and development of the vaccination programme.

Sir Simon Stevens said: "Less than a year after the first case of this new disease was diagnosed, the NHS has now delivered the first clinically approved Covid-19 vaccination - that is a remarkable achievement.

"A heartfelt thank you goes to everyone who has made this a reality - the scientists and doctors who worked tirelessly, and the volunteers who selflessly took part in the trials. They have achieved in months what normally takes years.

"My colleagues across the health service are rightly proud of this historic moment as we lead in deploying the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine."

PA

He added: "I also want to thank Margaret, our first patient to receive the vaccine on the NHS.

"Today is just the first step in the largest vaccination programme this country has ever seen. It will take some months to complete the work as more vaccine supplies become available and until then we must not drop our guard.

"But if we all stay vigilant in the weeks and months ahead, we will be able to look back at this as a decisive turning point in the battle against the virus."

The jabs will start to be given to as many people across the UK as possible, which Health Secretary Matt Hancock has called 'V Day'.

Incredibly, the first man in the UK to get the vaccine was named none other than William Shakespeare.

William Shakespeare is the first man in the UK to receive the Covid vaccine.
PA

The 81-year-old patient from Warwickshire received the Pfizer/BioNTech jab at University Hospital Coventry this morning (8 December).

BBC health reporter Hugh Pym shared a photograph of Mr Shakespeare just as he was given his first dose of the groundbreaking vaccine.

In a tweet, he said: "Second patient to get the Covid jab at University Hospital Coventry - would you believe it....William Shakespeare from Warwickshire."

He is among the very first patients in the country to receive the immunisation, which will need to be topped up in three weeks time.

Featured Image Credit: PA