More than three million people in the UK are yet to be vaccinated against Covid-19, it has been revealed. It comes as a government committee calls for increased efforts to get those in vulnerable groups fully vaccinated as infection rates continue to rise again.
A report by the Public Accounts Committee said it wanted to reduce the number of unvaccinated adults in England by half a million to 2.5 million, but that "fresh approaches" were needed in order to do so.
Pregnant women are one of the groups with a low vaccination uptake, with only 58 percent receiving two doses as of February 2022.
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The PAC report also outlines that people of black, black British and Pakistani origins were also less than half as likely to have had their boosters compared to those of white British origin, despite being more vulnerable. Only 38pc of school children aged 12 to 15 have received two doses, compared to 55pc of 16 to 17-year-olds.
Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the Public Accounts Committee, said: “The Department and NHS England must build on the initial successes of the vaccine programme and redouble efforts to reach people who are unvaccinated and at greater risk of becoming hospitalised or dying as a result of Covid-19.
“Despite work to date, low vaccination rates persist in many vulnerable groups and fresh approaches are needed.”
The report states that it is “not yet clear” how NHS England “will strike the right balance” between increasing vaccination rates and the limited services available to do so.
However, the government says walk-in and mobile vaccination clinics for convenience and using "trusted voices" from communities to persuade people to get jabbed were among the measures already being deployed.
Analysis by UK Health Security Agency has confirmed that both full and booster vaccinations reduce the risk of someone falling ill, being admitted to hospital or dying due to Covid-19.
Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that 2.7 million people in private households in the UK are estimated to have had Covid-19 last week, up 18pc from 2.3 million the previous week.
The ONS reported that this increase is likely caused by Omicron variants B4.5 and BA.5, which are strains of concern.
This week the Manchester Evening News reported that patients being hospitalised with Covid had more than quadrupled in just over a month in Greater Manchester. Health chiefs in the region warned that the next ‘wave’ of the virus had started, and the chief of the World Health Organization has warned that the pandemic is "nowhere near over".
A Government spokesperson said: “Our world-leading Covid vaccination programme has saved countless lives and continues to do so – more than four in five of those eligible having received their spring booster and we urge anyone eligible to get their jab.
“We are working hard to reach those people who are still unvaccinated against Covid, including using walk-in and mobile vaccination clinics to increase access and convenience, and providing bespoke messages from trusted voices – such as faith and community leaders – to diverse people to get the vaccine.
“NHS England has already begun preparations to ensure they are ready to deploy Covid vaccines to those eligible as part of an autumn Covid booster programme to ensure protection is maintained ahead of winter.”
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