The charter flight landed at Warsaw’s Chopin Airport in the early morning, Michał Kuczmierowski, head of the country's Material Reserves Agency (ARM), told the media.
The shipment was transferred to one of the agency's warehouses, from where it will be distributed to pharmaceutical wholesalers and then to hospitals and vaccination sites across the country, state broadcaster TVP Info reported.
Michał Kuczmierowski, head of Poland's Material Reserves Agency (ARM). Photo: PAP/Leszek Szymański
The first batch of 10,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses arrived in Poland on December 26.
A day later a 52-year-old Warsaw hospital nurse became the first Pole to be vaccinated against the coronavirus.
As of Monday, more than 1.65 million COVID-19 vaccine shots had been administered across the country.
The immunization effort began after the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on December 21 recommended conditional approval for a coronavirus vaccine produced by Pfizer and BioNTech for use across the European Union.
That decision by the EU regulator was subsequently greenlighted by the bloc’s executive, the European Commission.
The European Medicines Agency on Wednesday, January 6, gave the green light to a COVID-19 vaccine developed by US drug maker Moderna, the second shot it had approved, as countries stepped up inoculation efforts amid fears of more contagious strains of the coronavirus.
The first delivery of 27,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine arrived in Poland on January 12, followed by a further 42,000 doses on January 31.
The European medicines regulator on January 29 approved the AstraZeneca/Oxford University vaccine for people over the age of 18, the third coronavirus shot to be cleared for use in the EU.
Poland on February 6 received its first delivery of 120,000 doses of a vaccine offered by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, officials said.
In the first quarter of this year, around 3.1 million people are expected to be vaccinated for COVID-19 throughout the country.
Frontline healthcare workers are first in line to be inoculated, followed by nursing home residents, the elderly, people with chronic health conditions, teachers, police, and soldiers.
Poland last month began administering COVID-19 vaccines to its senior citizens.
The country is set to begin vaccinating teachers this week, with sign-ups opening on Monday.
Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki announced in December that his government had secured vaccines for the Polish population from six leading international drug makers.
The European Union, of which Poland is part, has struck deals to secure vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Moderna, CureVac, Sanofi-GSK, and Johnson & Johnson.
Poland originally announced plans to spend PLN 3 billion (EUR 675 million, USD 820 million) on more than 60 million doses of coronavirus vaccines under a national inoculation program adopted by the government.
Last Monday, the prime minister's chief of staff, Michał Dworczyk, said that Poland had ordered almost 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines in total, enough to inoculate 58 million people, more than its population of around 38 million.
Around 6,000 vaccination sites are available to citizens as the country rolls out its COVID-19 vaccination programme.
Dworczyk said last month that a move by Pfizer to reduce the supply of COVID-19 shots had forced Poland to modify its vaccination plans.
He said in a tweet on Sunday that, in terms of coronavirus vaccine doses given per 100 people, "Poland has outdistanced" many other European countries, including Germany and France, and "far exceeded the EU average."
"We would like to thank all the people and institutions involved in the national vaccination programme," Dworczyk said.
The government at the end of December launched a media campaign called Szczepimy Się (Let's Get Vaccinated) to encourage Poles to get COVID-19 shots.
Poland on Monday reported 2,431 new coronavirus infections and 45 more deaths, bringing its total number of cases during the pandemic to 1,552,686 and fatalities to 39,132.
(gs/pk)
Source: IAR, PAP