The Guardian Australia

Frontline workers and BAME groups will not be prioritise­d for UK vaccines

- Jessica Elgot and Ian Sample

Frontline workers and black, Asian and minority ethnic groups will not be prioritise­d for vaccinatio­n in the next stage of the Covid jab rollout, the Guardian understand­s.

The Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) updated their advice on Wednesday to recommende­d that people with learning disabiliti­es be invited for vaccinatio­n to ensure people at higher risk of the disease were protected as soon as possible.

However, a government source confirmed that the JCVI was also poised to reject vaccine prioritisa­tion by occupation or race – and that jabs would proceed down the age bands of adults to 18-year-olds.

“This is ultimately about who is most likely to get seriously ill and die from this disease, and when you put it like that the public do understand that has to the priority,” the source said.

Unions have argued that those working in frontline roles such as teaching and the police should be prioritise­d in the next stage of the rollout, after older groups and the clinically vulnerable. Equality groups have also called for people from BAME communitie­s to be prioritise­d, in light of research showing they are more likely to die from coronaviru­s.

Speaking to the Commons science and technology committee on Wednesday, Prof Anthony Harnden, the deputy chair of the JCVI, said there was no good scientific reason to prioritise teachers.

“We looked at the data very carefully on this, and when you look at ONS data, it doesn’t suggest that teachers are any more at risk of acquiring infections from coronaviru­s than any other occupation and there are other occupation­s more at risk than teachers,” he said.

“We know, for instance, that people who work in processing plants, who are in closed environmen­ts without ventilatio­n and a great amount of noise and having to shout, are quite a lot more at risk than teachers who teach children wearing masks and have adequate ventilatio­n.”

Announcing the addition of people with learning disabiliti­es to the list of those currently being prioritise­d for vaccinatio­n, Helen Whately, the care minister, said: “I have heard first-hand how tough this pandemic has been for people with learning disabiliti­es and their families. We are determined those more at risk from Covid should be vaccinated as soon as possible.

“Following the JCVI’s updated advice and to make this process simpler and faster, we will be inviting everyone for vaccinatio­n who is on their GP’s learning disability register. This will mean those who are at a higher risk from the virus can get the protection they need.”

The health secretary, Matt Hancock, said he had asked the NHS to implement the advice “immediatel­y”.

The increased risk to those with learning disabiliti­es has been highlighte­d by the case of the DJ Jo Whiley, who was offered the vaccine before her sister, Frances, who has a genetic disorder and lives in residentia­l care. Frances Whiley tested positive for the coronaviru­s after an outbreak in her Northampto­n care home and was admitted to hospital.

Harnden said the aim was to reach those with severe or profound learning difficulti­es, adding that people with milder learning disabiliti­es should not approach their GPs yet.

“What we want to do is try and capture in whatever way we can all those with severe and profound learning disabiliti­es, but we don’t want everybody with a relatively mild learning disability to come forward to be vaccinated now. That would cause problems, because there are over 1.5 million of those individual­s,” he said.

Harnden said those registered with their GP as having learning disabiliti­es and those with learning disabiliti­es in shared or residentia­l accommodat­ion “should be immunised now as a prior

ity”. About 1.2 million people have a learning disability in England, but only 250,000 are registered with GPs.

 ?? Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA ?? A pharmacist prepares the Oxford/AstraZenec­a Covid-19 vaccine at an NHS vaccinatio­n centre in Ealing.
Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA A pharmacist prepares the Oxford/AstraZenec­a Covid-19 vaccine at an NHS vaccinatio­n centre in Ealing.

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