Registered or not, all disabled will be vaccinated, says Khairy

Registered or not, all disabled will be vaccinated, says Khairy

Vaccination minister tells unregistered homes not to fear coming forward for vaccination.

Khairy Jamaluddin has promised that no action will be taken against unregistered centres, so they should not fear coming forward. (Bernama pic)
KUALA LUMPUR:
All persons with disabilities (PwDs), even those who are not registered with the social welfare department (JKM,) will be vaccinated under the National Covid-19 Immunisation Programme, says the programme’s coordinating minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

As such, Khairy said, unregistered centres should not fear coming forward for vaccination.

He said now was not the time to talk about registration status as the government’s priority was to ensure that the PwD group would also be vaccinated.

“We will leave no one behind. I have decided to make vaccination available to all PwD care centres, including those not registered with JKM.

“No action will be taken against unregistered centres, so they should not fear coming forward for vaccination,” he said in a virtual conference on the immunisation programme with the PwD community today. The community was represented by Ras Adiba Radzi.

Ras Adiba said that as at December last year, 52 PwD care centres in the country were not registered with JKM.

Based on a projection of 15% of the country’s population being PwDs, it would mean there are some four million unregistered PwDs as only 600,000 PwDs were registered with JKM, she said.

Khairy, who is also science, technology and innovation minister, said that under phase two of the national immunisation programme, mobile units had been sent to PwD care centres to vaccinate the residents.

He said other efforts to reach out to PwDs included setting up a vaccination centre at the Malaysian Association for the Blind in Brickfields and providing a “calming room” for neurodiversity care centres to cater for vaccination of the autistic group.

Khairy said for the hearing-impaired, the health ministry was now holding engagement sessions with sign language interpreters to help convey the message on registration for vaccination.

He said there were also vaccination programmes for Orang Asli which covered PwDs, with teams going to their settlements, adding that the government was considering a call to vaccinate PwDs studying in institutions of higher learning or whose parents are working there.

On Ras Adiba’s proposal for guardians of PwDs to also be given priority in vaccination, Khairy said this would be decided at a meeting on Thursday.

For people suffering from rare diseases, Khairy said they should go to special vaccination centres at hospitals to get advice from specialists before seeking appointments for vaccination.

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