TWO videos have been produced by Farnham Lions volunteer Graeme Main, in partnership with GPs and the town council, giving a step-by-step walk-through of Farnham Hospital’s vaccination clinic.

The short videos – one explaining how to get to the clinic, and the other on the path patients will take inside the hospital, narrated by Dr Ed Wernick – have been published on the Frimley Health and Care Integrated Care System’s YouTube channel.

Patients are asked to arrive at the time of their jab appointment, and not earlier, and follow the signs to a dedicated parking area beyond the hospital car park’s main entrance.

They will then be directed through the hospital foyer by volunteers, and up to the clinic on the first floor – by lift only if necessary – where they will be met by NHS reception staff and sent through for their jab, leaving by a separate exit.

More than 10,000 people have been vaccinated at the town’s pop-up community clinic since mid-December.

And young people categorised as being ‘clinically extremely vulnerable’ have also begun receiving their Covid jabs both at Farnham Hospital and out in the community.

One such person is Hope Stevens, 22, from Farnham, whose visit to the hospital was recorded by a team from BBC News last Friday.

Hope was invited for a jab as she has Crohn’s disease, a lifelong condition characterised by inflammation of the digestive system.

Her interview was expected to be broadcast on the BBC Six o’Clock News and Ten o’Clock News on Wednesday, February 17.

Farnham’s jab service has to date vaccinated about half of the 65-70s cohort, but is currently ‘on pause’, with clinics not expected to resume until next Thursday.