The process of vaccine is making its way. One of the UK's senior-most medical chiefs has designated that a vaccine against COVID-19 could be ready to be deployed by the start of the New Year, according to a media report on Sunday. Jonathan Van-Tam, England’s Deputy Chief Medical Officer and one of the government’s advisers on the coronavirus pandemic, has reportedly told members of Parliament (MPs) that the vaccine created at Oxford University and is manufactured by AstraZeneca could be ready for rollout soon after Christmas in December. Haryana govt announces payment of crop to farmers within 7 days In India, the vaccine has a Serum Institute of India tie-up as it undergoes trials. "We aren’t light-years away from it. It isn’t a totally unrealistic suggestion that we could deploy a vaccine soon after Christmas. That would have a significant impact on hospital admissions and deaths," a leading daily quoted Van Tam as telling the MPs during a briefing last week. An MP who attended another briefing with Van-Tam told the newspaper that the medic was "very bullish about the third stage AstraZeneca results, which he expects between the end of this month and the end of next." Jet Airways gets new owner, aircraft will fly soon "Van-Tam expects it to protect the elderly and vulnerable. He gave us to understand that it stopped the virus ‘shedding’ in the young. He said he would expect vaccination to start in January," the MP was quoted as saying. It comes as the UK government introduced new laws on Friday that would allow larger numbers of healthcare workers to administer flu and potential COVID-19 vaccines. Gold demand declines in India due to Corona epidemic, imports decreases