Matt Hancock says vaccination drive is ‘a full seven-day’ service
Matt Hancock says vaccination drive is ‘a full seven-day’ service despite apparent drop in numbers at weekends – with health chiefs blaming ‘data lag’ for dip amid calls to increase to 24/7 delivery
- 321,951 people received dose of Oxford or Pfizer vaccine on Thursday – followed by 328,260 on Friday
- Figures – which include first and second doses – then drop to 280,390 on Saturday and 227,972 on Sunday
- Public Health England today blamed the lower figures on reporting delays over the weekend
- Matt Hancock insisted the rollout was a ‘full seven-day service’ with the Government ‘prepared to go 24/7’
Matt Hancock has insisted the UK’s ambitious vaccination drive is a ‘full seven-day service’ – despite an apparent drop in the number of people receiving jabs at the weekend.
This week’s figures showed a total of 321,951 people received a dose of the Oxford or Pfizer vaccine on Thursday – followed by a further 328,260 on Friday.
The figures – which include both first and second doses – then drop to 280,390 on Saturday, followed by another dip to 227,972 on Sunday.
Public Health England today blamed the lower weekend figures on reporting delays, as the Health Secretary insisted the roll-out was a ‘full seven-day service’ with the Government ‘prepared to go 24/7’.
When asked about the drop in figures at today’s daily Downing Street press briefing, Mr Hancock urged Britons to look at weekly averages rather than data from an individual day.
He said: ‘The vaccine delivery is absolutely delivering a full seven-day service and we are prepared to go 24/7.
‘I wouldn’t read too much into an individual day’s data, I think the best thing to do is look at weekly averages and, as you say, you can see that going up, and up fast.’
Mr Hancock said vaccine supply was the ‘rate-limiting factor’.
‘If you listen to voices on the ground in the NHS, you hear people saying ‘give us more supply and we will jab it into more arms’,’ he added.
‘We are shoveling it out as fast as we can.’
Pressure is mounting on the Government to dish out coronavirus vaccines 24/7, with Labour saying No10 ‘must deliver for the British people’ because the public ‘have sacrificed so much’.
But ministers earlier claimed there was ‘no clamour’ for appointments beyond 8pm.
And it was yesterday revealed that management consultants paid for by the Government to speed up the vaccine roll-out have told ministers there is little demand for vaccinations to be administered 24/7.
They claim getting pensioners to vaccination centres in the middle of the night is not ‘physically feasible’ and the constraint on the current programme is not the lack of hours in the day but making sure there is enough skilled staff.
Matt Hancock tonight revealed more than 4million Britons have now had a coronavirus vaccine, amid mounting claims that a ‘postcode lottery’ has left vulnerable people in certain areas unprotected
With the successful roll-out of a Covid vaccine the only hope ministers have of being able to ease the lockdown restrictions this spring, the Health Secretary told the nation: ‘Don’t blow it now, we’re on the route out’
Management consultants paid for by the Government to speed up the vaccine roll-out are pushing back on plans to introduce a 24-hour Covid jab service. Pictured: Robert Salt, 82, at Andrews Pharmacy in Macclesfield last week
On another turbulent day of developments in the coronavirus crisis:
- The Covid-19 mass vaccine programme will not have an impact on hospital admissions or death rates until ‘well into February’, national medical director for NHS England Stephen Powis warned today;
- Ministers are facing a major Tory revolt over whether to extend the £20 a week uplift to Universal Credit during pandemic;
- First Minister Mark Drakeford has defended the slower rollout of the vaccination programme in Wales – saying the Pfizer vaccine could not be used all at once;
- Health Secretary Matt Hancock will take a Downing Street press conference at 5pm this evening;
- NHS figures revealed one in six Covid-19 patients in English NHS hospitals arrived without the virus but were infected there since September;
- Another 671 deaths were recorded, the highest number for any Sunday of the pandemic so far, along with 38,598 new cases;
- Ex-Supreme Court judge Lord Sumption sparked a row after telling stage 4 bowel cancer sufferer Deborah James on TV that her life was ‘less valuable’ than other people’s;
- All travellers arriving in Britain face being forced to quarantine in hotels under plans to further lock down the country’s borders.
More than 15 companies are being paid millions of pounds by the Government to help get the country vaccinated quickly and effectively. Many of the firms were responsible for implementing UK’s Test & Trace tracking system, reports claim.
Yesterday, NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens said a trial for 24-hour Covid vaccines will begin within the next 10 days.
And Boris Johnson earlier promised the NHS would launch an all-night jab programme ‘as soon as we can’.
But chief executive of the Management Consultancies Association Tamzen Isacsson said firms have told ministers that a round-the-clock programme for the Oxford and Pfizer jabs ‘wouldn’t be the answer to the problem at the moment’.
She told The Daily Telegraph: ‘Getting elderly people to somewhere at 2am is just not physically feasible, practically.’
She said there are enough vaccines available and enough time to administer them – but the ‘constraint’ is ‘making sure that the right skilled staff who have been trained with this vaccine are in the right place to administer it’.
Mr Hancock last week said the NHS will would do ‘whatever it takes’ – but he played down the prospect of a round-the clock operation, saying people will prefer to get jabs in the day.
And in the Commons, vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said round-the-clock vaccines will not happen in the first phase, where the four most vulnerable groups are being targeted, because staff would end up ‘standing around waiting’.
‘If we were to go to a 24-hour regime, it would be much harder to target the vaccine at those four cohorts,’ he said.
‘Obviously, when we have limited vaccine volume, we do not want staff standing around waiting for people in centres that are open 24 hours.’
NHS boss Sir Simon was yesterday asked if he would like to see jabs given ‘all day, all night’.
He told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show: ‘Absolutely, we will do that at the point that we have enough supply that it makes sense.
‘We will start testing 24/7 in some hospitals over the course of the next 10 days.
‘But we are at the moment vaccinating at about 140 jabs a minute and yesterday (Saturday), a quarter of a million people got their vaccinations on the NHS.
‘I’m pretty confident by the time we get to the end of today, Sunday night, we will have perhaps done 1.5 million vaccinations this past week, that’s up from around a million the week before.’
‘We are vaccinating four times faster than people are catching coronavirus.’
Speaking at the press briefing today, Mr Hancock revealed that 4million Britons have now had a coronavirus vaccine, amid mounting claims that a ‘postcode lottery’ has left vulnerable people in certain areas unprotected.
With the successful roll-out of a Covid vaccine the only hope ministers have of being able to ease the lockdown restrictions this spring, the Health Secretary told the nation: ‘Don’t blow it now, we’re on the route out.’
NHS staff administer the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine at the Totally Wicked Stadium, home of St Helens rugby club, one of the new mass vaccination centres opened today
John Mason, 82, receiving a Covid-19 vaccination from nurse Anie Santillan in the crypt of Blackburn Cathedral today
The Health Secretary also admitted supplies of the only two approved jabs, made by Pfizer and AstraZeneca, are being prioritised to areas lagging behind in the roll-out.
It comes after another 7million Britons were sent invite letters to receive their coronavirus jabs from today — but only in areas where the ‘majority’ of over-80s have had it already.
Discussing Britain’s growing Covid vaccine postcode lottery, Mr Hancock praised Slough for ensuring all of their care home residents have had their first dose. Newcastle-upon-Tyne has also achieved the feat.
But he said: ‘What we’re doing now is making sure that whilst they, of course, will be able to move onto the next group, we’re prioritising the supply of the vaccine into those parts of the country that need to complete the over-80s.
‘But we don’t want to stop the areas that have effectively done that job already, we want them to carry on, but the priority of the vaccine is according to the JCVI prioritisation list. The critical thing is to make sure that everybody can get it, that we’re putting more supply into the areas that have got more to do.’
Whitehall insiders believe the UK’s vaccine rollout is going so well that the wider adult population may be covered by June rather than September, with around 280,000 doses currently being administered each day. Ten new mass vaccination centres opened today, to speed up the programme even further.
Mr Zahawi today insisted people in their 70s will only be offered jabs in areas where the ‘majority’ of over-80s have already had their first shot. That could mean people in areas such as London and Suffolk, where progress has been slower, will have to wait longer.
But the situation is mired in confusion as Mr Zahawi suggested a ‘majority’ means 90 per cent of the highest age bracket — whereas Downing Street pointed to more than half.
Boris Johnson was shown the vaccine quality control systems on a visit to Oxford Biomedica in Oxfordshire today
The Prime Minister toured a warehouse at the vaccine manufacturing facility in Oxfordshire today
Cabinet minister Therese Coffey complained this morning that in her constituency some individuals in their 70s were being offered jabs ahead of the more elderly
NHS data shows the North East and Yorkshire made most headway in the first month of vaccinations, reaching 44 per cent of all over-80s by January 10 — the most recent day figures are available for.
This was almost twice as fast as in the East of England and London, which only managed to immunise 27.9 per cent and 29.5 per cent of its most elderly residents, respectively.
NHS bosses do not publish a daily regional breakdown of how many over-80s have had a jab, meaning the true picture is currently a mystery.
Meanwhile, the eligibility of Britain’s biggest ever inoculation drive is being expanded despite vaccines not yet having been distributed to all care homes.
Most residents and carers have already had their first shot in Newcastle, but in rural Suffolk the programme is struggling to speed up.
The PM defended the shift on a visit to Oxfordshire this afternoon, insisting that while the four most vulnerable groups remained the ‘top priority’ it was right to widen the scheme ‘as more vaccine comes on stream’.
Asked if he was concerned about a postcode lottery, Mr Johnson said: ‘I think actually the whole of the UK is going very well. And, overall, the pace of the rollout is very encouraging.’
Cabinet minister Therese Coffey voiced frustration today, saying ‘something isn’t right’ and it was ‘distressing and annoying’ that individuals in their 70s were being offered jabs ahead of the more elderly.
‘Vaccinations started well in Suffolk Coastal in the last few days, but something isn’t quite right as in some places, patients aged 70+ are being contacted for vaccination ahead of 80+/90+ year olds,’ she tweeted.
Ms Coffey later said that she had been assured ‘letters and messages will be going out today’ to all over-80s who had not already been contacted.
Letters are being sent out in England inviting the next two priority groups for vaccinations. That includes 4.6million in their 70s plus another one million classed as ‘clinically extremely vulnerable’ because they have conditions affecting the immune system, certain cancers or are organ transplant recipients.
In London vaccinations have been trailing behind the rest of the country, with Tory MPs voicing alarm that the supplies are being based on take-up of the flu vaccine last winter, which was low in the capital. Downing Street insists the supplies are being ‘distributed equally’.
Some 140 people a minute are receiving a jab, putting Britain on course to vaccinate all adults by early autumn, if not before. However, one coronavirus patient is being admitted to hospital every 30 seconds.
Asked why fewer vaccines were being administered on weekends, Mr Hancock said people should look at weekly averages rather than data from an individual day.
He said: ‘The vaccine delivery is absolutely delivering a full seven-day service and we are prepared to go 24/7.
‘I wouldn’t read too much into an individual day’s data, I think the best thing to do is look at weekly averages and, as you say, you can see that going up, and up fast.’
Mr Hancock said vaccine supply was the ‘rate-limiting factor’. He added: ‘If you listen to voices on the ground in the NHS, you hear people saying ‘give us more supply and we will jab it into more arms. We are shovelling it out as fast as we can.’
Mr Hancock has said there should be a ‘national debate’ on which groups should be prioritised for the vaccine once the over-50s have received the jab.
‘After that it is essentially about protecting people as well as possible according to essentially a judgment who should come next,’ he told a No 10 news conference.
‘That is why I think we should have a debate about it. After that, it is really about protecting against transmission and making sure that we can get life back to normal as soon as possible.’
The Government last night announced that the first phase of the vaccine programme has made enough progress that those in their 70s and on the shielding list will be called up to get their jabs from today.
But in some places medics still haven’t got through to the over-90s, who are in the top priority group for the Covid vaccines. Matt Hancock last week revealed GPs leading Britain’s great vaccination drive were forced to pause jabs to allow other parts of the country to catch up.
Newcastle’s care homes saw all their residents get vaccinated against Covid by seven medical teams who made their way through the city in just two weeks.
Care home residents are top of the Government’s priority list for vaccination because they face such a high chance of dying if they catch Covid-19.
Ministers pledged to get jabs to all of them – there are around 400,000 people living in homes across the UK – by the end of January.
The roll-out could not start immediately because the first vaccine to be approved, Pfizer’s, had to be kept in specialist freezers so couldn’t be transported in batches smaller than 1,000 to begin with.
But since the approval of Oxford and AstraZeneca’s jab, which can be kept out of the fridge for almost an entire working day, the care home programme has sped up.
Leader of Newcastle City Council, Nick Forbes, said: ‘In less than two weeks we have protected the most vulnerable people in our communities, providing the residents and their families with a sense of reassurance and hope they have longed for.
‘It is also relief for care home staff who have given so much during this pandemic, prioritising the health and care of the residents they work with.’
Public Health England data shows that the North East & Yorkshire – the region containing Newcastle – was furthest ahead with its vaccine programme by January 10.
This is the most recent data available and local figures are not yet available for areas smaller than regions.
It shows that the North East and Yorkshire had vaccinated 370,694 people by January 10.
Elderly people have been the priority since the vaccine programme started and data published by Public Health England shows exactly how many of them have been vaccinated.
PHE figures show that 43.8 per cent of over-80s in the North East & Yorkshire had received a Covid vaccine by January 10, compared to 27.9 per cent in the East of England.
In London the figure was 29.5 per cent, in the Midlands 33.4 per cent, in the South West 34.3 per cent, in the South East 34.8 per cent and in the North West 35.9 per cent.
Mr Johnson last week told MPs: ‘There are parts of the country where they have done incredibly well in, for instance, vaccinating the over-80s.
‘We are well over 50 per cent now in the North East and Yorkshire; less good in some other parts of the country.’
It is not clear whether some regions are vaccinating fewer people because they can’t get enough supplies or because they aren’t rolling them out quick enough.
Hailing the vaccine expansion today, Mr Johnson said it ‘marks a significant milestone as we offer vaccinations to millions more people who are most at risk from Covid-19’.
The vaccination centre in Bournemouth officially opened today and is expected to give jabs to more than 9,000 a month
NHS staff administering the vaccine in St Helens today as the drive to innoculate the population steps up another gear
Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi (left) was bullish about the September target for covering all adults in a round of interviews this morning. NHS England medical director Stephen Powis (right) today warned that vaccines will not have an impact on the death rate until ‘well into’ February
‘We have a long way to go and there will be challenges ahead – but together we are making huge progress in our fight against this virus,’ he said.
There are claims swirling that Mr Johnson wants all adults to get an initial jab by June. And Mr Zahawi backed the target to offer a first jab to everyone by September as ‘achievable’.
However, he fuelled questions about the way in which people are getting access by confirming that over-70s are currently being offered first jabs in areas only where ‘the majority’ of over-80s have had their first shot. The speed of the process has varied widely in different areas.
‘Anyone who is over 80 watching us this morning should not worry because we are making sure that those areas have vaccinated the majority of their over-80s,’ Mr Zahawi told the BBC.
‘And in some areas they’ve got to 90 per cent of their over-80s, that’s where the letters are going out for the over-70s to invite them for their vaccinations.’
Downing Street said those aged over 70 would start to be offered vaccines in areas where the ‘majority’ of those in the older age category and higher up the priority list had already received their first jab – but refused to say what that meant.
A spokesman said: ‘From today, those aged 70 and over will begin receiving invitation for vaccination, and it will be for them to book an appointment or come forward.
‘Depending on where they are, the timing will be slightly different but the important point is that this allows areas that have already vaccinated a majority of those over 80, care home residents, frontline NHS and care home staff to keep the momentum up and to start giving it to further-at-risk people.’
Asked whether those in their 70s could expect to start receiving their vaccination this week, the spokesman said the jabs would start ‘shortly’.
The PM’s spokesman also insisted supplies were being ‘distributed equally’ across the country.
‘In some areas where they have already vaccinated the majority of those four high-risk groups, we want to ensure we maintain momentum and continue to rollout the vaccine to more and more people who are at higher clinical risk – that’s why we sent out the letter to the over-70s,’ the spokesman said.
‘The Prime Minister has stated clearly that we will ensure that everybody in the first four priority groups will receive a vaccination by February 15 and we’ve also said that care home residents will all have received it by the end of the month.’
But Work and Pensions Secretary Ms Coffey was among those expressing alarm at the situation, although she later said she had been reassured.
‘I know it is both distressing and annoying when people hear that other cohorts of a lower priority (according to the JCVI) are being vaccinated ahead of our oldest and most vulnerable. On that point, every care home resident will be vaccinated by next Sunday,’ she posted on Facebook.
‘I am already in regular contact with the NHS and Ministers but will be following up with the local NHS to work out what is going on regarding contacting 80+ population (main route is by text and/or letter) and will be pressing for some local communication.’
Touring the Oxford Biomedica vaccine plant today, Mr Johnson appeared to dismiss demands from Tory MPs for an early ‘road map’ to show how lockdown will be eased.
And he warned when the loosening does come it will not be an ‘open sesame’ moment.
The PM told reporters: ‘I understand completely that people want to get back to normal as fast as we possibly can. It does depend on things going well.
‘It depends on the vaccination programme going well, it depends on there being no new variants that throw our plans out and we have to mitigate against, and it depends on everybody, all of us, remembering that we’re not out of the woods yet.’
He said: ‘We’re going as fast as we can but I stress we can do everything we can to open up but when we come to February 15, and the moment when we have to take stock of what we’ve achieved, that’s the time to look at where the virus is, the extent of the infection and the success that we’ve had.
‘It’s only really then that we can talk about the way ahead and what steps we can take to relax.
‘I’m afraid I’ve got to warn people it will be gradual, you can’t just open up in a great open sesame, in a great bang, because I’m afraid the situation is still pretty precarious.’
Mr Zahawi laid out the timetable for easing the lockdown, although he warned there were ‘caveats’ about whether it could happen in early March.
He told BBC Breakfast: ‘If we take the mid-February target, two weeks after that you get your protection, pretty much, for the Pfizer/BioNTech, three weeks for the Oxford/AstraZeneca, you are protected.
‘One of the things we don’t know yet, and the deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam is on record as saying ‘look give me a couple of months and I’ll tell you’, is the impact of the vaccine on transmission rates ie on infecting people.
‘So there are a number of caveats that stand in the way of us reopening the economy.
‘It will be gradually, it will be probably through the tiered system but you’re looking at that sort of period, two to three weeks after the middle of February, after we’ve protected the top four cohorts.’
He said there should be ‘very clear evidence’ by the second week in March that there had been a ‘break in the correlation between infection rates and hospitalisation and obviously death’.
‘There is some really good early data from Israel, where they have vaccinated 20 per cent of the over-60s and they are beginning to see, two weeks later, a marked reduction in the serious illness and death in that same cohort.
‘So, two weeks after mid-February, we should be seeing a marked reduction in death and of course serious illness,’ he said.
Mr Zahawi said 24-hour vaccinations will be piloted in London hospitals by the end of January – but he played down the usefulness of the idea in the first phase.
He told Sky News: ‘We are going to pilot the 24-hour vaccination, the NHS is going to pilot that in hospitals in London and we will look at how we expand that.’
Pressed for when the pilots will start, he said: ‘By the end of January, absolutely.’
But he said 8am-8pm vaccination ‘works much more conveniently for those who are over 80 and then as you move down the age groups it becomes much more convenient for people to go late at night and in the early hours’.
Home Secretary Priti Patel today vowed tougher enforcement on lockdown-sceptic protests as she chatted to police officers in Westminster
Several passengers have been refused permission to fly to Britain from the US today after being told their negative Covid results were ‘not sufficient’. Pictured, Heathrow Airport
Boris Johnson, pictured with his son Wilfred on Sunday, has promised the first four priority groups will all have received the jab by the middle of February
The new mass vaccination hub that has opened in the Olympic Office Centre in Wembley, London today
Meanwhile, Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford has defended the slower rollout of the vaccination programme in Wales – saying the Pfizer vaccine could not be used all at once.
The Welsh Government has faced criticism in the past week for vaccinating fewer people in proportion to its population than the other home nations.
Statistically, Wales is behind the other nations of the UK in delivering the first dose of the vaccine per 100,000.
As of last week, 3,215 had received it in Wales, compared to 3,514 in Scotland, 4,005 in England and 4,828 in Northern Ireland.
Mr Drakeford dismissed the statistics as ‘very marginal differences’, and went on to explain that supplies of the Pfizer vaccine had to last until the beginning of February and would not be used all at once.
‘There will be no point and certainly it will be logistically very damaging to try to use all of that in the first week and then to have all our vaccinators standing around with nothing to do with for another month,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
‘The sensible thing to do is to use the vaccine you’ve got over the period that you’ve got it for so that your system can absorb it, they can go on working, that you don’t have people standing around with nothing to do.
Mr Raab pledged yesterday that every over-18 will be offered a first jab by September – if not earlier.
And he said he was hopeful some lockdown restrictions could start to be lifted from March.
Ten new mass vaccination hubs will open today, including Blackburn Cathedral and Taunton Racecourse.
Ministers said the priority this week will still be to vaccinate the top two priority groups, made up of care home residents and staff, the over-80s, and NHS workers.
More than 3.8million have received their first vaccine dose so far. But NHS sites which have spare capacity will be allowed to offer jabs to those aged over 70 and those who are ‘clinically extremely vulnerable’.
Boris Johnson has promised the first four priority groups will all have received the jab by the middle of February.
The PM said: ‘Today is a significant milestone in our vaccination programme as we open it up to millions more who are most at risk from Covid-19. We are now delivering the vaccine at a rate of 140 jabs a minute and I want to thank everyone involved in this national effort.
‘We have a long way to go and there will doubtless be challenges ahead – but by working together we are making huge progress in our fight against this virus.’
Mr Hancock added: ‘Now that more than half of all over-80s have had their jab, we can begin vaccinating the next most vulnerable groups.
‘Where an area has already reached the vast majority of groups one and two, they can now start opening up the programme to groups three and four.
‘We are working day and night to make sure everyone who is 70 and over, our health and social care workers and the clinically extremely vulnerable are offered the vaccine by the middle of February and our NHS heroes are making huge strides in making this happen.’ Mr Raab said yesterday it would be ‘great’ if the rollout could be faster amid reports that the target of offering everyone in the UK the jab could be met by June, but said the Government was working to the early autumn target.
‘Our target is by September to have offered all the adult population a first dose. If we can do it faster than that, great, but that’s the roadmap,’ he told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday.
Mr Raab said the Government hoped 88 per cent of those most at risk of dying from coronavirus would receive their first jab by the middle of February, with 99 per cent of those at greatest risk protected by the early spring.
He suggested lockdown restrictions could then be eased – with a possible return to the tiered system. ‘I think it is fair to say it won’t be a big bang, if you like, it will be done phased, possibly back through the tiered approach,’ he told BBC1’s Andrew Marr Show.
Asked if vaccine supplies are sufficient for someone to get their second dose within 12 weeks, he said ‘we ought to’ be able to deliver.
Sir Simon Stevens said staff were jabbing ‘four times faster’ than people are newly catching the virus.
He also predicted lockdown could be eased ‘gradually’ around spring and summer time. However, he said this would depend on the effect of new variants of coronavirus.
A new strain found in the UK that is more transmissible than previous types is rapidly spreading across the country, and variants found in Brazil and South Africa are also being viewed with concern by virologists in case they are more resistant to vaccines.
Covid was England’s biggest killer in 2020 and accounted for one in eight deaths, official data reveals
Coronavirus was the leading cause of death in England last year and accounted for one in eight fatalities, official data has revealed.
An Office for National Statistics report published today found Covid-19 was responsible for 69,101 out of 569,770 total deaths in 2020 (12.1 per cent).
The figure is slightly lower than the 78,076 on the Government’s dashboard because the ONS looks at cases where Covid was mentioned on the death certificate. The official tally counts people who died within 28 days of testing positive for the virus. Number 10’s figure will also be higher because it includes deaths from this January.
Dementia and Alzheimer’s were the second biggest killers in England in 2020, claiming 66,060 lives, while heart disease was behind 51,979 deaths. There were just 18,656 flu and pneumonia deaths last year, 40 per cent lower than average, which is thought to be the knock-on effect of social distancing measures.
The ONS report also found that in December, deaths from all causes were 25 per cent higher than the five-year average. Covid-19 was by far the biggest killer last month, claiming 10,973 lives. Covid killed more people than dementia, Alzheimer’s and heart disease combined (9,646).
Meanwhile, an interactive map developed by the ONS shows how those in the poorest parts of the country have been two-and-a-half times more likely to fall victim to Covid-19 than those in the wealthiest areas.
Scientists say people in deprived neighbourhoods are at an increased risk because they often have poorer general health, are more likely to live in overcrowded and multi-generational households and rely on public transport.
The ONS said there were 52,676 deaths registered in England in December last year. This was 8,390 more deaths than in December 2019 and 10,594 (25.2 per cent) deaths more than the five-year average. Of the deaths registered in December 2020, 26,981 were males and 25,695 were females.
In Wales, there were 3,941 deaths, which was 851 more deaths than in December 2019 and 1,075 (37.5 per cent). more deaths than the five-year average for December. Of the deaths registered in December in Wales, there were 2,047 male deaths and 1,894 female deaths.
Coronavirus was the leading cause of death for the second consecutive month in both England (accounting for 20.8 per cent of all deaths registered in December) and in Wales (27.4 per cent of all deaths).
Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease was the second leading cause of death in both countries, with Covid-19 accounting for more than double the second leading cause in England, 10,973, compared to 5,281, and more than triple in Wales, 1,081 compared to 346.
Yorkshire and The Humber was the English region with the highest mortality rate for deaths due to Covid-19 (320.5 deaths per 100,000 people), followed by the East Midlands (316). The South West had the lowest mortality rate, at 123.1.
In December in England, the death rate from Covid was two-and-a-half times greater in the most deprived areas at 391.6 per 100,000 compared to the most affluent places, where it was 152.3. There was a similar picture in Wales, where it was 560 per 100,000 in the poorest parts compared to 285.9 in the wealthiest.