First dose rates HALVE in a fortnight with hesitancy rates high in the young
Britain is ‘close to maximum vaccine take-up’: First dose rates ‘HALVE in a fortnight because of high hesitancy rates in the young’
- Latest figures show first doses have halved to just 100,000 on average
- Less than 85,000 were administered over the last three consecutive days
- Government scientists fear uptake in the UK may be close to maximum
<!–
<!–
<!–<!–
<!–
(function (src, d, tag){
var s = d.createElement(tag), prev = d.getElementsByTagName(tag)[0];
s.src = src;
prev.parentNode.insertBefore(s, prev);
}(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/1.17.0/async_bundle–.js”, document, “script”));
<!–
DM.loadCSS(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/gunther-2159/video_bundle–.css”);
<!–
Britain may be nearing maximum uptake for the Covid vaccine, top scientists fear as rates continue to slump — despite there being millions of young adults who are yet to take up the offer.
Just 100,000 first doses are currently being dished out every day, half the rate seen a fortnight ago when the drive was up and running for all over-18s.
No10’s advisers believe Britain is now ‘close to maximum take-up’, The Times reports. Around 2million 18-24 year olds are still unvaccinated.
Millions of young people are reluctant to get vaccinated against coronavirus, despite ministers pledging to scrap self-isolation rules for double-jabbed Brits and let them go on summer holidays to Greece, Spain and Italy.
And ministers also believe those jab requirements will boost uptake, it was claimed today.
Main reasons for younger people not wanting to get a vaccine revolve around Covid posing a much smaller threat to them, and misinformation circulating online.
One virologist called on ministers to increase the ‘messaging around the benefits of vaccination’.
Professor Jonathan Ball, of Nottingham University, told warned about the risk of ‘very debilitating long Covid’ in younger adults.
This graph shows the percentage of Britons in each age group who have received a first dose (green bar) and second dose (orange bar). Uptake is higher in older groups, who were invited for jabs earlier and are more at risk from the virus
Daily first doses (green bars) have tumbled by 100,000 over the last two weeks
Young people are less likely to get the Covid jab because they do not see themselves as at risk from the virus, and due to misinformation online. Pictured: Young Brit vaccinated in Doncaster
Observers first noticed the roll-out was slowing down last month, which raised fears that the slump could scupper Freedom Day plans.
The pace dropped because of the decision by Government advisers to recommend alternatives to the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab for the under-40s and limited supply of the two alternatives – Pfizer and Moderna.
But now the speed of the inoculation drive may be nearing an inevitable slow down, with all over-18s having now been eligible for a jab since mid-June.
Young adults were the final group to be invited for their jabs, with the UK’s campaign initially focused on protecting the elderly.
But after an initial surge in demand which NHS bosses compared to the scramble for Glastonbury tickets, the pace has slowed.
Officials have already launched two ‘Grab a Jab!’ weekends to boost uptake, where people can turn up for their first doses without a booking.
NHS vaccination data shows 60 per cent of 18 to 24-year-olds had got their first dose by June 27, while among 25 to 29-year-olds it was 73 per cent.
For comparison, 94 per cent of over-80s now have their first dose, and for 75 to 79-year-olds the rate is 90 per cent.
There have been calls for health chiefs to slash the time between doses from eight weeks because of the lower uptake.
But evidence suggests the longer gap between them may actually make them more effective at preventing infections and serious disease.
There have been reports of vaccination centres giving out second doses just three weeks after the first.
More than 45.5million Britons — or 86.4 per cent of adults — have got a first dose, and 34million — or 64.6 per cent — have received both doses.
It comes less than two weeks before most of the remaining Covid restrictions are eased in a ‘big bang’ reopening on July 19.
Boris Johnson has steamed ahead with plans to drop the measures, saying it is better to ease them in the summer before the virus ‘has an edge’.
But scientists writing in The Lancet today have called on the Prime Minister to abandon his strategy amid spiralling infections.
Estimates suggest there could be more than 100,000 in the UK before ‘Freedom Day’, as cases double every six days.
Experts had expected Covid vaccination rates in the country to be low, fearing uptake may be as low as seven in ten.
But the public has been very receptive to vaccines, with uptake above nine in ten among older age groups.