reports.
Some GPs say they still haven't got their first batch - despite being promised doses before Christmas - while others say deliveries have been cancelled several times.
The PM says vaccines offer "the means of our escape" from the shutdown as Wednesday's daily death toll exceeds 1,000 for the first time since April.
Mr Johnson and his ministers have pinned their hopes on the approved jabs as a super-infectious mutant strain runs rampant in every region of England.
Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty this week revealed that one in every 50 Brits now has coronavirus, while hospital admissions are 40 per cent higher than at the peak of the first wave in April 2020.
But in brighter news, a single-shot vaccine developed by a US company may be approved in the UK by next month, scientists and Whitehall officials believe.
It's hoped regulators will give Johnson & Johnson's drug the green light within weeks.
The UK has already ordered 30m doses with the option of 22m more.
But the PM warned on Monday there are difficult weeks ahead as hospitals reach crisis point and the UK Covid alert is set at the highest level for the first time ever.
Lucy Watson, the chairman of the Patients Association, told the paper: "For patients to be confident that the NHS remains open for business it would be helpful for there to be clear messages from NHS England, on practice websites and in the media, about which healthcare activities are being stopped in primary care and which healthcare activities are being continued.
"Patients would also like, and deserve, much more clarity about the pace of vaccine roll-out.
"Many might be happy to accept minor disruption in the interest of speedy vaccinations.
"But many patients found their relationship with their GP was disrupted earlier in the pandemic – more disruption, without transparency or explanation, is likely to be upsetting for some patients."
Coronavirus deaths top 1,000 for first time since April and cases are highest ever for second day running with 62,322