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FROM TODAY PEOPLE aged over 65 will be able to register their details so they can receive an appointment for a Covid-19 vaccine.
The portal is open for those aged 69 first, rolling out over the following four days to those aged 68, 67, 66 and then 65.
This is the beginning of the age-based rollout of the vaccination programme, with a similar system due to be used for later cohorts.
As part of our Reader Q&A series, we have been breaking down the latest developments with the rollout in Ireland, trying to answer as many of your questions as we can.
This week the focus is on how the rollout to those aged 65-59 will work – here are some of the questions readers sent us.
The portal
When will the portal be operational?
If I have no access to the portal how can I register?
Will we be able to book a slot for vaccination ourselves or are we just registering interest?
What information will I need at hand to register for the vaccine?
Tomorrow it will be open for those aged 68, Saturday will be the first registration day for those aged 67, Sunday will be the first day for the 66 group and on Monday the portal will be open for those aged 65.
The HSE has said it is asking people to begin registering on specific days to help manage demand on the system. You will also be able to access this system after those days – registration is not limited to this five-day period.
The registration system can be accessed through the HSE website.
The Taoiseach has said hundreds of people have already registered this morning:
Great to see that hundreds of people have already registered on the new #COVID19 vaccine portal this morning.@HSELive are asking people aged 69 to register today. See: https://t.co/LXV87JtP0a
There is a queuing system on the site to manage traffic but it has been moving quickly.
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People will be asked to provide basic details such as their name, email address, phone number and date of birth. They will also be asked to provide their PPS number and their Eircode.
The purpose of the system is to register your interest in receiving a vaccine and to make your details available to the health service – you will not be able to book a specific time slot for your own vaccine through the portal.
Vaccines for this group – around 180,000 people – will be given over April and May, starting around one week after registration opens.
The HSE said appointments will be assigned by age, so it does not matter how quickly you register, ie a 65-year-old who registers on Monday will not get an appointment earlier than a 67-year-old who registers three days later.
People who do not have access to the internet or who are not confident with using the online portal can call 1850 24 1850 for assistance with the registration process.
Will people be told in advance which vaccine they’re receiving?
My husband and myself suffer from clots with a family history on my side. Is it possible to have the Pfizer vaccine or do we have a choice? We don’t want the AstraZeneca one.
As a healthy 69-year-old man, I may be offered the AstraZeneca vaccine in the near future. As there is a history of thrombophlebitis [clots in the leg], can I refuse this vaccine and elect to take another?
The news this week that the National Immunisation Advisory Committee (NIAC) recommended the AstraZeneca vaccine be used only in those aged over 60 has caused concern among some who are still due to receive it.
The decision was taken after a small number of serious but rare blood clotting disorders were identified in people shortly after receiving a dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine. The European regulator has stated that these blood clotting events should be listed as a possible rare side effect of the vaccine.
These reported events involved blood clots in the brain, abdomen and arteries, together with low levels of platelets and sometimes bleeding.
Those rare blood clotting events occur in 4-10 cases in every million AZ vaccine doses administered, in which one person may die. As of 4 April, 221 cases of these rare events were reported to the European centralised database. Around 34 million people had been vaccinated in the EEA and UK by this date.
This week Irish health officials explained that someone aged 60-64 is 85 times more likely to die of Covid-19 than to have any clotting event following the vaccine – this includes all clotting events; regular clotting such as those identified in the leg as well as the rare thrombosis.
People aged 55-59 are 48 times more likely to die of Covid-19 than get a blood clot.
Evidence shows that these vary rare side effects have been mostly seen in people under 60.
Currently, the AstraZeneca vaccine is the jab that will be used for those aged 65-69. Those over 70 will continue to receive the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines.
While it is up to each individual to choose whether they want to take a vaccine – and they have a right to refuse a vaccine – it is not possible to refuse one and then request a different one. The advice is to accept whichever vaccine you are offered.
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Deputy Chief Medical Officer Dr Ronan Glynn earlier this week explained that while people who refuse the AstraZeneca vaccine now will not be blocked entirely from receiving a vaccine, they will have to wait considerably longer for an alternative. This means delaying protection from the disease, a particular concern among those aged over 60.
“If someone aged 65 is thinking of taking this vaccine if it’s offered to them in the coming weeks, versus waiting for the summer when there’s a surplus of other vaccines, I would highly, strongly recommend that they take what they are being offered now,” he said.
“What’s being offered is a very safe, very effective vaccine for their age cohort. The risks of them catching Covid-19… and ending up dying of that disease are far, far, far higher than any potential risk on receipt of one of these vaccines.”
The HSE has said those who have a history of blood clots in the family, as well as those who have recently had a clot or who are on blood thinning treatments should still have the AstraZeneca vaccine when offered it. This advice also applies to those who have a condition or who are on treatment that makes them more likely to get a blood clot – they should still get the vaccine.
“There is no reason to delay vaccination,” The HSE said. “Like everyone who gets the vaccine, you should be aware of the symptoms to look out for.”
These include:
breathlessness;
pain in the chest or stomach;
swelling or coldness in an arm or leg;
severe or worsening headache or blurred vision after vaccination;
persistent bleeding;
multiple small bruises, reddish or purplish spots, or blood blisters under the skin.
Location
Can we still attend our own GP for a vaccine?
Will we be able to choose our vaccination centre, or at least be guaranteed one near to where we live?
Vaccinations for this cohort will be done at a vaccination centre, not at a GP surgery.
GPs are currently focused on medically vulnerable groups such as those aged over 70 and those with very high risk and high risk conditions. These vaccinations at GP surgeries will be taking place in parallel to the rollout to those aged 65-69.
When you receive a notification by text message about your appointment, you will get a date, time and the address of a vaccination centre to go to. This will be sent three to seven days before the appointment.
Here’s the full list of vaccination centre locations:
Sligo IT
Galway Racecourse
Radisson Hotel, Limerick
Páirc Uí Chaoimh
City Hall Cork
MTU Campus Melbourn Building
WIT Arena
Aviva Stadium
Citywest Convention Centre
International Arena AIT, Athlone
Helix Theatre DCU
Letterkenny Institute of Technology
Kilmore Hotel, Co Cavan
Hillgrove Hotel, Co Monaghan
Primary Care Unit, Carrick on Shannon
Breaffy House Resort, Castlebar
Abbey Hotel, Roscommon
West County Hotel, Ennis
Abbeycourt Hotel, Nenagh
Mallow GAA Club
Killarney Sports & Leisure Centre
Clonakilty GAA Club
Bantry Primary Care Centre
Kerry Sports Academy
Cillin Hill Conference Centre, Kilkenny
The Clonmel Park Hotel
Riverside Hotel Enniscorthy
Carlow IT
Shoreline Leisure Centre, Greystones
Arklow Bay Hotel & Conference Centre
Punchestown Racecourse
Bloomfield House Hotel, Mullingar
Simmonstown GAA Club, Navan
Midlands Park Hotel, Portlaoise
Fairways Hotel, Dundalk
Clonguish GAA Club, Co Longford
Tullamore Court Hotel
Croke Park
As part of the registration process people will be asked to provide their Eircode, so it is likely this will be used to ensure they are sent to a vaccination centre that is close to them.
If you’ve used the registration system today, we want to hear how you found the experience. Email answers@thejournal.ie.
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I still rent from them. They used to have a shop in Carpenterstown and when that closed a couple of years ago, they set up a dvd vending machine in the Spar next door. I don’t rent as often as I used to but I still do.
Their prices are ridiculous. I was renting games for years from them. 7 quid for a week. I was dropping back a game one day and decided to rent another one. They said the price went up to ten euro. No bother I said, still good value, a tenner for the week. Oh no, she said, it’s a tenner for 3 nights now. Overnight the price jumped 300%. Haven’t been near the place since.
I worked for them for years. The old owners had no direction or plans other than blaming everyone and everything for their failure. I feel sorry for the store staff.
I worked with them for nearly 10 years, really enjoyed my time there until the recession hit, then (as Dave said above) they started blaming everyone and everything when people weren’t coming in to rent, and those that were, we had to push deals to them. When they didn’t take them, we got threatened with verbal warnings for it! I remember I got told I wasn’t smiling enough so the customer didn’t take the offer, I laughed all the way home that night. At least I can say it was entertaining! Haha
I feel for the staff now as it was the ones in Head Office that made stupid decisions that lead it to where it is today (along with people not renting as much) Of course, the ones in HO will waltz in to other jobs with their experience while the ordinary staff member is left to worry about what coming next
I worked for them for a while during college and although it was a handy job and i enjoyed it, the writing was on the wall for the company for a long time. Even purely from an operations perspective they were doomed-treating their staff as the enemy, very aggressive and incompetent area managers, insufficient stock being sent to shops etc…
Kevin I think you’re wrong about execs from HO walking into other jobs.
Xtra-vision execs are unattractive candidates.
They couldn’t see obvious: streaming was of course going to replace DVDs. Blockbuster made the same stupid error and they fell over 2 years ago.
Then electronics shops stopped selling DVD players.
What on earth did Xtra-vision execs think was going to happen here? I wouldn’t hire one of them if you paid me.
Ah i’d argue everything has its purpose and place Shane.I remember people saying Amazon and the Kindle would see the closure of Chapters and Easons Bookstore.I have a kindle and i use Amazon but i also like the feel of reading a paper book and magazine too.Its nice to go in and have a coffee and read in these places rather than just buying online..Plus the Exchange rates for sterling and dollar are making the Irish stores way more appealing
I agree Harry, but a lot of book shops have closed. I used to love Waterstones and having a decent shop like Borders in blanch centre often saved me having to go into the city to buy books. Both gone now I’m afraid, and the Eason in Blanch is a poor excuse for a bookshop.
Rather in this case, the internet hitting what was once Xtravision’s core business – rental, not retail. They hung onto some rural stores where rental held up better than large urban stores.
Amazon is back tracking opening physical book stores…
Not sure if it will be successful. It’s quite surreal, very like shopping online… And you have to look up the prices online they aren’t displayed and get the usual Amazon recommends and suggestions when you do.
Molly, their store finder still shows two stores in the Waterford county. If it’s out of date, then it doesn’t say a lot about their website. They tended to shut smaller stores when leases ran out and open larger retail outlets.
We have a local bookshop in cork city called vibes & scribes & i find them way better then big chain stores like eason & waterstones… They can order most things that would have gone out of print unlike chain stores… Therefore i always give them my business!
Agree , and I see Amazon have just started opening retail stores exactly for that reason , they recognise the value of having customers engage in the real world so to speak..
I do know Mick that when they moved to our town they undercut the other 2 local rental stores forcing them out of business, so I hated using xtravision for that reason. Their old store is now a charity shop in aid of a local cause, at least something good came out of them closing.
Haven’t stepped foot in an xtravision or hmv store since their antics during the Xbox one release were they held console preorders ransom forcing customers to buy a game or they wouldn’t get the console. Bye bye xtravision you sneaky sods.
I just compared the buy price of a DVD box set (us rural dwellers subject to rubbish internet connections are still compelled to buy/rent DVDs). HMV are charging €10 less than Xtravision and free delivery – seems like a strategic move….
Unfortunately it was only a matter of time, I’m actually surprised they have held in there so long. No doubt there’ll be a whole new load of sunbed shops popping up now.
Since nobody else has bothered to say it I hope all the staff but especially full-time are able to find employment after this,I worked for them years ago and know that it has been very rough for some staff over the last few years of uncertainty,I also know that it is not an easy job,at all.Staff are often caught between the company and the public and blamed squarely for company policies. Best wishes to the staff of these stores and good luck ,hopefully the company concentrates on its HMV brand and manages to keep people employed for another few years.
He says as he types on internet accessible hardware that he bought, using an internet connection that he”s paying for, commenting on a website that has employees, via his twitter account, as he generates ad revenue via internet traffic.
To be honest over the next 20 years or so we’ll see a massive decline in IT jobs as self replicating and self learning technology comes online. Outside of a few ‘leets’ here won’t be much of a market for people sitting around hacking code.It will be more conceptual than technical. The industry has self obsolescence built into it. And don’t even get me started on these ‘data centers’ the government has being touting as a cure all for unemployment.
There’s probably some new “thing” bubbling under or in someone’s head, something we can’t even perceive…..and will change everything again and probably create loads of jobs.
Yes but where are the employees of these retail places meant to go when they’ve been shut down. Not everyone can seamlessly move into another type of job. I think it’s not something to be celebrated
The future of IT and employment would seem pretty clear.There will be a shift where all businesses will go online. Moving into niche and local markets that are too small for large companies to pursue and using local knowledge, existing presence/connections/customers and specialties to better exploit opportunities.
Previously small businesses were disadvantaged they didn’t have the same IT resources, to finance expansion, build websites, track and target customers, launch marketing campaigns, volume discounts from suppliers, logistics…
All that will change. A one man operation or family business will be able to tap into all the same services of a huge corporation as and when they need. Without huge investment costs and risks
The new IT companies won’t want to do the ‘dirty work’ of actually making and selling products and services. They just want the monopoly on being the go between for a business and customers
Of course I agree baz – but it’s called progress. We evolve & move on. So does business – but new industries are created so it all balances out. 100 are lost in Xtra Vision and an IT firm just announced 98 new jobs in Cork yesterday.
This can be traced back to the time Xtravision management decided to extort their own customers in November 2013.
Customers who wanted to preorder an XboxOne for Christmas were forced to buy an additional full price (obviously overpriced) game.
Companies tend to disappear up their own arse when greed becomes their mission statement.
This can be traced back a lot further than that. Xtravision’s upper management were horrendous. I remember when they wanted staff to write to their local TD to have internet speeds reduced because of “illegal downloads”. They were clueless to their market.
Digitally downloaded games or music have big drawback though, you cannot have nice collection on your shelf and there is no exchange / resale value as you cannot sell it or swap (easily anyway). Ease of use and accessibility is a plus. Price wise it’s also weird as online downloads are often more expensive than physical discs. So there is no disc manufacturing cost and yet it’s still more expensive. Lot of games on PlayStation online store still in region of 50-60 euro when brand new boxes copies are going for half this price…
Ger, Amazon deliver for free on anything over £25 if you’re happy to wait 3-4 days for it. Games there are considerably cheaper than retail in this country.
I don’t go to them anymore as they do not sell pc games (internet is crap where I am so I try to get physical copy) I used to when I was a console peasant, but no longer will I be going to xtravision..Hope the staff find jobs after!
They didn’t treat their customers very well. After a number of instances where I took a game off their shelf and tried to purchase it for the stickers price only to be told that the price was more than advertised. When I told them they had to sell it at the advertised price by law, they said no and that someone could have changed the price. I then went to the location where I picked it up and EVRY SINGLE COPY was priced “incorrectly” so either they’re incompetent by pricing them wrong or someone decided to price everything incorrectly using their price gun for sh*ts and giggles….NUMEROUS TIMES (at least 5). What’s more believable? I refused to pay the higher price and never darkened their door again. Tullamore store. Buh Bye Lads and Lassies. Don’t let the door hit ya where the good Lord split ya! No sympathy for the staff there as it was the staff that refused to act legislated for.
“I told them they had to sell it at the advertised price by law.” I hated customers like you when I worked in retail – let me guess you did Junior Cert Business Studies and now you’re an expert on consumer law? Simple staff error or that head office could have recently changed the price and the already overworked and underpaid staff member didn’t have time to get to that section yet. The customer is always (read: hardly ever) right.
“When I told them they had to sell it at the advertised price by law”, this is not true. If they inform you before they make the purchase, you have the choice of not buying the good. http://www.consumerhelp.ie/pricing-rules
Sometimes the tags would be changed (happened a lot when I worked there) or they would often send through price changes but would only have one staff member on to do them. I’m not saying this is what happened in every store but definitely in the smaller ones.
Firstly, isn’t there a consumer act to protect people from instances like this? I never claimed to be an expert on consumer law. If the prices do not match then there is a breakdown in the system and that needs to be rectified, it’s not the customer’s fault. Also, if this happens numerous times then it’s a chronic problem. Hating customers like me is your prerogative and that attitude is exactly why purchasing anything in that store was a bitter experience for me as a customer. You don’t have to like me, in fact I couldn’t care less about what you think of people like me (your customers), I do expect you to honour the law and do your best to make sure that this doesn’t happen again. I walked with my feet and that played a part in biting the company in the arse.
First of all, it happened on three occasions that I handed them over my money and the purchase was made. They refused to honour the price advertised and then refunded me the money when I told them the prices didn’t match. They refused to sell it at the advertised price. I know mistakes can happen which then made me more weary on the prices after that. I then asked them to scan anything before I purchased them. I did make the decision not to purchase, I amassed my collection online or through Gamestop.
Some companies will sell it at the sticker price out of goodwill, Tesco for example. Xtravision, well considering they insisted that people who preordered an Xbox One had to buy a game to get it…
They’re the lads who tried to rip off customers that pre-ordered Xbox One by forcing them to buy an additional game before they would honour the preorder, and they’re in partnership with the company that went into administration and refused to honour gift vouchers. How they stayed in business this long is a mystery.
I still use the one in Clondalkin a lot. I prefer renting DVDs to buying them as I usually only watch films once. It’s a fairly busy store in the evenings and weekends and I hope it isn’t one of the ones closing
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In support of the purposes explained in this notice, your device might be considered as likely linked to other devices that belong to you or your household (for instance because you are logged in to the same service on both your phone and your computer, or because you may use the same Internet connection on both devices).
Identify devices based on information transmitted automatically 116 partners can use this feature
Always Active
Your device might be distinguished from other devices based on information it automatically sends when accessing the Internet (for instance, the IP address of your Internet connection or the type of browser you are using) in support of the purposes exposed in this notice.
Save and communicate privacy choices 103 partners can use this special purpose
Always Active
The choices you make regarding the purposes and entities listed in this notice are saved and made available to those entities in the form of digital signals (such as a string of characters). This is necessary in order to enable both this service and those entities to respect such choices.
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