The Guardian (USA)

What to do about the UK’s unvaccinat­ed? No 10’s Covid dilemma

- Rowena Mason Deputy political editor

Agrowing sense of frustratio­n with people who have not been vaccinated against Covid has been creeping into the speeches of senior government figures from Sajid Javid to Boris Johnson in recent weeks.

The health secretary has accused those who have chosen not to take up the offer of free vaccinatio­n of taking up hospital beds, damaging society and potentiall­y harming their families as well as themselves.

The prime minister also began rolling the pitch for a possibly tougher approach towards the unvaccinat­ed when he spoke of the need for a “national conversati­on” about how the NHS would cope with the Omicron wave and further new variants.

“I don’t believe we can keep going indefinite­ly with non-pharmaceut­ical interventi­ons, restrictio­ns on people’s way of life, just because a substantia­l proportion of the population still, sadly, has not got vaccinated,” he said.

Given the libertaria­n instincts of today’s Tory party, No 10 has followed the path of allowing people to choose freely whether or not to get vaccinated, unless they want to work in the NHS and the care sector.

A mandatory vaccinatio­n policy would almost certainly result in a challenge to Johnson’s authority from his backbenche­s. Those same MPs, however, are also opposed to national restrictio­ns that hit all of society to prevent the NHS from being overwhelme­d.

If another Covid wave were to push the health service to the point of collapse, Downing Street would face two possibilit­ies: lock down everyone or reserve the harshest restrictio­ns for the 5 million people who have declined to be vaccinated in the hope it would ease the burden on hospitals and slow the spread of an outbreak.

Javid has estimated that 90% of the most severely ill in hospital at the moment are unvaccinat­ed.

Urging people to have a “jabby new year”, the NHS said on Wednesday that research from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC) found that at the start of last month about three in five patients in London’s intensive care units had not had a jab, and that the figure was rising.

Some countries have already decided that choosing not to be vaccinated should carry a cost, given the impact on wider society of Covid spreading more quickly among the unvaccinat­ed and the greater potential for hospitalis­ation.

Greece and France went down the Covid passport route as early as July. Israel and Denmark also adopted pass systems early, phased them out, and then brought them back when infections were surging.

In Italy, proof of vaccinatio­n, recovery or a negative test has been required for many indoor public places since October and a new super-green pass was added in December that is available only to people who have been vaccinated or recovered from Covid in the last six months.

All moves by the UK government so far to encourage vaccinatio­n have been firmly rooted in persuasion and “nudge” theory. It has been almost all carrot and no stick, even when it comes to Covid passports. Ministers insist they should not be called “vaccine passports” because people will be allowed to show a

recent lateral flow test result instead.

The approach of encouragem­ent is continuing, with a campaign texting everyone to “get boosted now”. But there also now appears to be an attempt to introduce an element of social stigma to vaccine refusal, and a move to suggest it is people’s civic responsibi­lity to get jabbed.

No 10’s view is that there is still scope to drive up vaccinatio­n rates further – particular­ly when it comes to the booster – and that this is preferable to using vaccinatio­n status as a dividing line. Almost 90% of over 12s have now had a first dose, 82% have their second and 56.5% are boosted.

One major missing piece of the puzzle, currently under considerat­ion, is a strategy that gets to the bottom of why 5 million people remained unvaccinat­ed, especially those in communitie­s with an ingrained distrust of authority.

No 10 even turned to an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) company earlier in the year to determine the causes of vaccine hesitancy, but Whitehall sources acknowledg­e there is still a lack of understand­ing about how many of the unvaccinat­ed remain so because of entrenched anti-vax ideology, misconcept­ions that could be turned around, a lack of time or transport to get to vaccine centres, or just apathy.

One option being weighed is the idea of greater personal outreach – learning from the personal touch of GPs who have phoned all their most vulnerable vaccine refusers. Ministers are even thinking about teams of doorto-door vaccinator­s who could deliver shots on the spot.

If this last push were not to work, however, and further restrictio­ns are deemed necessary, Johnson may have to confront a difficult choice, unpalatabl­e to his party, about whether everyone – the vaccinated and the unvaccinat­ed – are all in it together any more.

 ?? ?? The government’s approach to getting people to take up the offer of vaccinatio­n has been almost all carrot and no stick so far. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
The government’s approach to getting people to take up the offer of vaccinatio­n has been almost all carrot and no stick so far. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

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