COVID-19 vaccinations will soon be available in Jimboomba for patients in the 1B group.
The vaccine doses are coming to Jimboomba Junction Family Practice and Skin Cancer Clinic from March 22, and Jimboomba Pharmacy and Medical Centre on April 12.
It comes as authorities work to trace contacts of a Brisbane case.
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Those in the 1B group include healthcare workers, patients over 70 and those with high-risk jobs including defence, emergency services and meat processing employees.
Health care workers not already vaccinated, all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and adults with certain medical conditions can get the jab.
Jimboomba doctor Dev Kawol said 50 doses per week of AstraZeneca would be administered at the Jimboomba Pharmacy and Medical Centre.
"A lot of people think they can choose AstraZeneca or Pfizer, but they can't," he said.
He urged patients to make up their own minds before coming in for the vaccination.
"We are advising people to read everything and make an informed decision," Dr Kawol said.
"It [the vaccine] is considered safe by the government. It has Therapeutic Goods Administration approval. It goes through a big vetting process."
Senior government figures and health advisers say the AstraZeneca vaccine is safe and effective, following calls from a backbench colleague to suspend Australia's rollout.
AstraZeneca will be Australia's main coronavirus vaccine, with CSL's Melbourne plant expected to start its rolling supply from Wednesday, gearing up to produce one million doses a week.
There are still no reports of coronavirus spreading in Brisbane, six days after a doctor become infected.
The woman tested positive on Friday after working at Princess Alexandra Hospital and visiting four venues in the city's south on Thursday.
The state government has tested about 230 of the 400 people who may have come into contact with her, but all have come back negative.
"That's great news and we're feeling a little bit relieved today," Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said on Tuesday.
As a precaution, a lockdown of Brisbane's hospitals, aged care facilities and disability providers has been extended for a further 72 hours.
Meanwhile, guests at the Hotel Grand Chancellor will find out on Wednesday if their quarantine will be extended again.
Some already had to stay for a further three days upon completing their 14-day quarantine period last week after two guests in separate rooms on level one became infected.
One of them passed the virus onto the other, despite having no apparent physical contact, and later to the PA Hospital doctor.
Deputy Chief Health Officer Sonya Barrett said CCTV analysis shows no evidence of a quarantine breach at the hotel.
She said the first guest may be a supers-preader.
"Some people very readily transmit the virus due to a number of factors," Dr Barrett said.
Guests staying on level one have had their quarantine extended for 14 days from March 9.
Hotel staff who worked between March 5 and 9 were tested on Monday, and every guest who left after March 1 has been ordered to isolate and get tested.
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