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DUKAS_132263487_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
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DUKAS_132263430_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_132263464_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_132263431_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132263449_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132263450_EYE
‘Follow the science’: AstraZeneca unveils £1bn R&D centre. Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical company has come a long way since it fought off a takeover bid in 2014
AstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in CambridgeAstraZeneca unveils The Discovery Centre (DISC) in Cambridge
Portrait of Dr. Susan Galbraith during an interview with the Guardian journalists.
Little expense has been spared at the giant glass and steel structure that sprouts from a once-vacant plot of land on the outskirts of Cambridge.
AstraZeneca’s £1bn new research and development centre houses 16 labs and 2,200 scientists, making it the biggest science lab in Britain along with the Francis Crick Institute in London, and the pharmaceutical company’s biggest single site investment to date. Designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, the Discovery Centre (Disc) covers an area the size of eight football pitches, and is part of Europe’s biggest biomedical cluster. Cambridge University, two hospitals and hundreds of research institutions and biotech firms are nearby. The building is flooded with natural light, captures its heat from the ground beneath, and its toilets are flushed with rain water.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_131915051_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in masks on Oxford Street, London today walk past Black Friday posters as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
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DUKAS_131915049_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in Regents Street, London today as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
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DUKAS_131915048_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in Regents Street, London today as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
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DUKAS_131915050_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in Regents Street, London today as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
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DUKAS_131915047_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in masks on Oxford Street, London walk past Covid-19 information signs as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
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DUKAS_131915045_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in masks on Oxford Street, London walk past Covid-19 information signs as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_131915046_EYE
Christmas Shoppers London
Christmas shoppers in masks on Oxford Street, London walk past Covid-19 information signs as Education Secretary and former Vaccine Minister Nadhim Zahawi said that Britain could be the first major economy to transition from pandemic to endemic using Covid vaccines. Europe is currently battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections with demonstrations over new restrictions spreading throughout Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_133683186_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Kate Josephs, Chief Executive of Sheffield City Council photographed in Sheffield, south Yorkshire.
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DUKAS_133683184_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Kate Josephs, Chief Executive of Sheffield City Council.
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DUKAS_133683182_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Kate Josephs, Chief Executive of Sheffield City Council.
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DUKAS_133683185_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Terry Fox, Leader of Sheffield City Council, photographed in the Peace Gardens in Sheffield, south Yorkshire.
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DUKAS_133683178_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Terry Fox, Leader of Sheffield City Council.
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DUKAS_133683181_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Nalin Seneviratne , Director of City Development for Sheffield City Council.
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DUKAS_133683180_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Nalin Seneviratne, Director of City Development for Sheffield City Council.
© Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_133683183_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Nalin Seneviratne, Director of City Development for Sheffield City Council..
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DUKAS_133683179_EYE
Sheffield council to decide fate of chief Kate Josephs following lockdown drinks
Sheffield city council has set up a committee to consider the position of its chief executive Kate Josephs.
Nalin Seneviratne, Director of City Development for Sheffield City Council.
© Richard Saker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_131690280_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
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DUKAS_131690208_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
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DUKAS_131690281_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
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DUKAS_131690278_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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DUKAS_131690279_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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DUKAS_140937582_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_140937595_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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DUKAS_140937587_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937586_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937590_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937583_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937588_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937592_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_140937589_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937585_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_131690289_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_140937593_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_140937594_EYE
The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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The people making a difference: the public health champion who met his hero, Simon Cowell
Alfred Oyekoya helped boost vaccine takeup in Swansea’s BAME community - and was rewarded by visiting the set of Britain’s got talent
When Alfred Oyekoya had his first Covid vaccine in January last year, he wanted a photograph of the event. "I needed a picture of me getting the vaccine, to educate my community," says Oyekoya, 38, a civil servant living in Swansea. "The staff refused, telling me not to worry about education - the NHS was doing all that."
He was crestfallen. "People were expecting me to have proof that I’d taken the vaccine." Oyekoya returned to the vaccination centre a few hours later and this time was more insistent. Eventually the staff relented, took a photo of him, and Oyekoya uploaded the picture to social media.
He wasn't being difficult. As someone known in Swansea's African community for his public health advocacy - Oyekoya is British-Nigerian - he knew his decision would carry a lot of weight.
Community advocate Alfred Oyekoya in Swansea.
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_131690277_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Alex Lentati / eyevine -
DUKAS_131690275_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_131690276_EYE
PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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PM warns covid cases rise as Christmas approches.
Shoppers wearing masks enjoy the stalls at a Christmas Market in Trafalgar Square, London today. Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that he couldn’t rule out a Christmas lockdown as he urges Brits over 40 to get the booster jab. Downing Street also warned that cases where up in England with another surge of infection happening in Europe.
© Alex Lentati / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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Prime Minister Boris Johnson - Covid-19 Press Conference
15/11/2021. London, United Kingdom. Prime Minister Boris Johnson - Covid-19 Press Conference. The Prime Minister Boris Johnson chairs a Covid-19 press conference in No9 Downing Street with Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance and Chief Medical Officer, Professor Chris Whitty on Covid-19 vaccine boosters. Picture by Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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