Source: Lisa Ferdinando/Wikimedia Commons
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • Victorians aged under 50 will soon be able to access the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccination after the State Government extended its rollout
  • Around 400,000 Victorians will be able to access the jab from next Monday, including frontline workers, aged care nurses and those in the disability sector
  • The decision to advance the timeline follows a minor outbreak of COVID-19 within Melbourne, with a man testing positive for the virus earlier this week
  • The man contracted COVID-19 while staying in hotel quarantine in South Australia, and no new cases of the virus have been detected since
  • Meanwhile, the Federal Government has secured another batch of COVID-19 vaccines after signing an agreement with drugmaker Moderna

Victorians aged under 50 will soon be able to access the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccination after the State Government extended its rollout.

Around 400,000 Victorians will be able to access the jab from next Monday, including frontline workers, aged care nurses and those working in the disability sector.

Acting Premier James Merlino made the announcement on Friday, stating more vaccines had been made available.

“We’ve got additional Pfizer from the Commonwealth […] and that’s why we’re able to open that up to eligible people under 50 from Monday,” he explained.

“The more supply that we have from the Commonwealth, the more that we can do,” the Premier added.

Other frontline workers in Victoria, such as taxi-drivers, will also be eligible for the Pfizer jab from May 24.

The State Government’s decision to advance the timeline comes after a minor outbreak of COVID-19 within Melbourne earlier this week.

A Victorian man tested positive for the virus on Tuesday, having contracted COVID-19 while in hotel quarantine in South Australia.

No new cases have been detected in the community since then, with tens of thousands of tests carried out in the wider Melbourne community.

Meanwhile, the Federal Government has also secured another batch of COVID-19 vaccines for Australia after signing an agreement with drugmaker Moderna.

The agreement was announced yesterday, with 25 million doses of the biotech company’s vaccine to be sent to Australia across 2021 and 2022.

The Moderan vaccine will be used alongside the Pfizer jab in vaccinating the majority of Australians aged under 50.

The AstraZeneca vaccine, which was set to be used on most residents, was ruled out for under-50s due to rare blood clotting risks.

More From The Market Online

RBA keeps interest rates on hold in line with expectations

The Reserve Bank of Australia has acted largely in line with expectations and kept Australia's interest…

Aussie unemployment still too low, but Q1 2024 increase tipped: Oxford Economics

The Australian Bureau of Statistics has released unemployment data for October, posting a return to 3.7…

Building Approvals up 7.5 per cent, CapEx also climbs

The number of dwelling approvals rose 7.5 per cent last month, in a big turn around…

Australian unemployment rate remains at 3.9pc despite 65,000 job losses

Australia saw a significant employment drop of 65,000 jobs in December 2023, marking the second-largest loss…