The Guardian (USA)

No 10 says vaccine hesitancy is low in UK, amid Bolton concerns

- Jessica Elgot, Nazia Parveen, Niamh McIntyre and Pamela Duncan

Vaccine hesitancy remains extremely low in the UK, despite concerns over hospitalis­ed patients in some areas who have not taken the Covid-19 jab, No 10 has said.

No 10 said it had deployed thousands of additional vaccine doses to areas that had reported a sharp increase in the number of cases due to new variants originally detected in India, saying action would be taken to tackle rising cases.

The health secretary, Matt Hancock, said on Sunday that out of the 18 patients in hospital in Bolton, one of the hotspots for the virus, five had been vaccinated. Of the remainder, he said “the vast majority” had been eligible for the vaccine but had not taken it so far.

Yet both Downing Street and local MPs cautioned on Monday that the public should not draw damaging conclusion­s about anti-vaccinatio­n sentiment, particular­ly among minority ethnic communitie­s in two key towns, Bolton and Blackburn.

Bolton has the highest case rate in the country as of 11 May, with 255 cases per 100,000 residents, though its vaccinatio­n rate was in line with the national average, with 88.9% of people aged 40 and over having received their first dose. The rate is significan­tly higher than parts of London, including Westminste­r, where the rate is 63%.

While the Bolton-wide vaccinatio­n rate is in line with the England average of 89.8%, there are large variations within the local authority. In Lever Edge, which has the highest case rate in Bolton, 84.7% of those aged 40 and over are vaccinated.

Case rates in Bolton are significan­tly higher in areas of high deprivatio­n, while vaccinatio­n rates are lower in poorer areas and in those with higher black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) population­s, in line with national trends.

Yasmin Qureshi, the Labour MP for Bolton South East, said the issue in the town was “incredibly complex” and it was “wrong” to suggest people from BAME background­s were to blame for the increased cases of the B.1.617.2 variant first detected in India.

Qureshi claimed there had been problems with the rollout of the vaccine in her constituen­cy, something which she had raised with board members of the Bolton clinical commission­ing group (CCG), NHS England and the local authority in February.

In letters seen by the Guardian sent to the Bolton CCG and the Bolton GP Federation in February, Qureshi said people were struggling to get the jab, and called for vaccinatio­n centres to be “more rooted” in particular communitie­s with high levels of deprivatio­n.

“Essentiall­y people who had no access to their own transport were having to catch two, sometimes three buses, to get to a vaccinatio­n centre,” she said. “I told them that we needed a centre closer because this could have resolved the issue of uptake … This wasn’t just BAME people, I have lots of white, working-class people in my constituen­cy who were also struggling for access.”

Huge queues formed outside a mobile testing centre now set up at a Bolton secondary school, the Essa academy in Great Lever, which is part of Qureshi’s constituen­cy. The pop-up site has been set up specifical­ly in response to the spread of the new variant.

“Clearly people want the vaccine and now that we have a site right in the middle of the community people have turned up en masse,” Qureshi said.

“It’s not a case of hesitancy any more.”

Conservati­ve MPs in Bolton said there should be no delay in lifting further restrictio­ns. Chris Green, the MP for Bolton West and Atherton, said there should be “no delays, no turning back, let’s return to normal and stay normal” and said people who needed to seek routine medical treatment for other conditions would suffer longer under lengthier restrictio­ns.

His fellow Conservati­ve Mark Logan, the Bolton North East MP, urged the government to step up vaccinatio­n in his town, saying it had remained under restrictio­ns for longer than most of the country. “Bolton must be fasttracke­d for vaccinatio­ns and we must get that first dose out to all over-18s by the end of the month – as a priority,” he said.

Mark Harper, the chair of the 60strong group of MPs in the Covid Recovery Group, which has urged the faster lifting of restrictio­ns, tweeted a warning shot about how MPs might see any delay to unlocking perceived as being linked to vaccine hesitancy.

“Wider society’s fate can’t be sealed by the actions of a small group of people, whatever their reasoning,” he wrote.

Boris Johnson’s spokespers­on said there were no plans to offer new incentives for vaccinatio­ns but that the government was still co-ordinating significan­t outreach efforts in different communitie­s to encourage people to receive the vaccine.

“It’s really important when we’re talking about hesitancy to highlight the

fact that we have one of the most enthusiast­ic population­s for vaccine uptake in the world and that is only increased as we’ve progressed on the rollout,” he said.

“We’re not complacent and there are a number of different approaches we’re taking with vaccine-hesitant groups to engage in social media with community leaders, directly you know, using trusted voices and clinical voices, and that work continues.”

The spokespers­on said work to engage with different communitie­s had been successful so far. “We know there is continuall­y more work to do,” he said.

“We have deployed thousands of additional doses to the areas involved so they can do this work of getting vaccines to people.”

 ??  ?? People wait to receive their Covid vaccine in Stevenage, Hertfordsh­ire. Photograph: Joe Giddens/EPA
People wait to receive their Covid vaccine in Stevenage, Hertfordsh­ire. Photograph: Joe Giddens/EPA

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