Chichester Observer

More Sussex Community Trust staff have been vaccinated than any other nationally

- Patrick Jack Data reporter

More health care workers at Sussex Community Trust are vaccinated than almost anywhere else in the country, figures show.

The Government is soon to announce its decision on whether to make vaccines mandatory for frontline NHS staff, though several leading health bodies have cautioned against doing so.

NHS England figures published for the first time show that of the 7,879 health care workers at Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust, 7,568 (96.1 per cent) had been given their first dose of the vaccine by the end of September.

This is one of the highest rates of the more than 200 NHS trusts across England, though it means 311 workers are still unvaccinat­ed.

The figures also show 7,401 (93.9 per cent) had received both doses at Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust, which is the main provider of community services across West Sussex.

Across England, 110,000 healthcare workers have not had a vaccine.

Around 92.4 per cent of staff have had at least one dose, and 89 per cent both, though rates vary significan­tly at NHS Trusts across the country.

At the other end of the scale, just 84.2 per cent of workers at Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust have had at least one jab.

A government consultati­on on whether to make vaccines mandatory for health workers closes on October 22. It also questions whether flu vaccines should be a requiremen­t.

The Royal College of GPS strongly urged all health and care profession­als to be vaccinated, saying it will help protect them, their colleagues and their patients from contractin­g Covid-19.

However, Professor Martin Marshall, chair of the Royal College of GPS, added: “Whilst we understand the desire of some people to make vaccinatio­n mandatory, we don’t agree with it as informed and educated choices about health interventi­ons would be more beneficial long-term than enforcing them, which risks leading to resentment and mistrust.

“There are also workforce implicatio­ns to consider at a time when we need as many people as possible working in general practice and across the health and care sectors delivering essential patient care and services.”

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederat­ion, said: “Where uptake needs to increase, leaders are working with their teams ensuring they are fully supported.

“Making Covid-19 vaccinatio­n mandatory for frontline workers could have its advantages in the NHS but the Government needs to carry out a full risk assessment including timeframes to ensure there was no adverse impact on staff retention and recruitmen­t at a time when the NHS is facing significan­t demand for its services.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokeswoma­n said: “We continue to encourage the small minority of NHS staff who have not yet been jabbed to consider getting vaccinated to protect both themselves and patients.”

Separate figures from NHS Digital show staff have taken 7.7 million sick days since the start of the pandemic because of coronaviru­s.

At Sussex Community Trust the equivalent of 84,414 fulltime staff days were lost due to sickness between March 2020 and May this year.

Of these, 6,453 (eight per cent) were because of Covid-19.

 ?? ?? Figures show that 96.1 per cent of trust health care workers are vaccinated
Figures show that 96.1 per cent of trust health care workers are vaccinated

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