Air New Zealand offers the possibility of vaccination against COVID-19 on an airplane
(CNN) — New Zealand declared 16 October as Super Saturday, a date when the government is urging any eligible non-vaccinated New Zealanders to be vaccinated.
But a lucky few will be able to get vaccinated aboard an Air New Zealand 787 jet at Auckland airport.
Those who can sign up for the opportunity”Jabaseat“They will not only receive their first injection of the Pfizer vaccine. They will also receive a tour of an Air New Zealand hangar, complimentary breakfast and drinks served by Air New Zealand crew members, and a commemorative boarding pass.
According to a statement released by the airline, the unique offering is open to anyone in the Auckland area who is eligible for the vaccine, who has not yet received it, and enrolls through the National Service Portal for Air New. Can do. zeeland. Once they have registered for their vaccinations, they will see “Air New Zealand Jabaceet” as their potential vaccination location.
No fees will be charged for the vaccine or experience, although customers who can reserve a “Jabseat” will be responsible for their own travel to and from the airport.
“All people on Motu (the island) have a role to play in protecting Aotearoa/New Zealand against Covid-19 by vaccinating, and we are calling for a massive collective effort to do so,” said Tamati Shepard-Wipiti, The manager said in a press release from the Equity Group of the Ministry of Health’s COVID-19 Vaccines and Immunization Program.
New Zealand isn’t the only destination to offer a COVID-19 vaccine in unusual places as a way to inspire more people to sign up.
In New York, some were able to get vaccinated under the famous blue whale at the Natural History Museum, while a lucky few in Sweden signed up for vaccinations at the Nobel Prize Banquet Hall in Stockholm.
Thanks to quick and rapid border closures and strict closures, New Zealand had only 4,760 diagnosed cases of the coronavirus and 28 deaths, some of the lowest figures in the world.
According to data from Johns Hopkins University, about 50% of eligible citizens have been fully vaccinated by October 14.
However, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said the country is ready to move away from its “zero-Covid” strategy of living a lifetime with the disease. Other countries in the Asia-Pacific region, including Singapore and Australia, have taken similar steps in recent months. Vaccination and achieving herd immunity will be a fundamental step in this process.
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