The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh have been vaccinated against Covid, joining more than a million people in the UK who have been given the jab.
In an unusual move, Buckingham Palace – which rarely comments on the private health matters of the couple – announced that the 94-year-old head of state and her consort had been given the injection.
It is understood the Queen decided the information should be made public to prevent speculation. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: “The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh have today received Covid-19 vaccinations.”
A royal source confirmed to the Press Association that the injections were administered by a royal household doctor at Windsor Castle.
The Queen and Philip have been spending the lockdown in England sheltering at their Windsor Castle home after deciding to have a quiet Christmas at their Berkshire residence, and forgo the traditional royal family gathering at Sandringham.
The Queen and the Duke will have been in the second priority group, for those aged 80 and older, after care home residents and staff.
Discussions have been taking place in government about how to deploy public figures to encourage people to receive the vaccine, the Times has reported.
It is said that Prince Charles, the Duchess of Cornwall, and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, will let the public know when they have been inoculated. Charles and William tested positive for Covid last year but did not report any serious adverse consequences.
Queen Margrethe of Denmark, the third cousin of Elizabeth II, became the first European monarch to receive the coronavirus vaccine this week.
In 1957, the Queen made public that Charles and his sister, Princess Anne, then eight and six, had been inoculated against polio with what was then a new vaccine.