Less than half of people living in parts of London, Birmingham and Leeds have received their first stroke with Covid, according to official statistics.
Harehills South, a Leeds neighborhood known for crime and antisocial behavior, has the lowest absorption rate. Only 38.5% of people over the age of 12 living in the area have already accepted the invitation for their first dose.
Prices are below the 50 percent threshold in 13 other areas scattered across the country.
By comparison, the absorption rate is above the 90 percent limit in one-fifth of England’s more than 6,700 districts.
Experts today say the “disappointing” data – which MailOnline has put in a convenient search tool you can use – shows that the No. 10 strategy has failed to persuade the most needy areas to come forward.
The UK’s flagship vaccination initiative is credited with saving tens of thousands of lives, sustaining NHS pressure and shifting the darkest days of the pandemic in history.
Vaccine data collected by the UK Health Security Agency are based on the percentage of people over the age of 12 who have been injected.
The absorption data are based on population data from the National Immunization Management Service, which keeps inoculation records for the whole country.
UKHSA chiefs are breaking down statistics into several geographical regions, including one known as the middle-class super-productive regions. MSOAs are home to about 8,000 people each.
UKHSA chiefs are breaking down statistics on vaccine use in several geographical regions, including one known as the middle ground. MSOAs are home to about 8,000 people each. Harehills South (shown in the top right map) has the lowest first hit rate (38.5%), followed by Waterloo Road in Wolverhampton (bottom left map, 44.4%) and Stamford Hill North in Hackney (bottom) right card, 46.1 percent)
IN WHICH PARTS OF ENGLAND DO YOU HAVE THE LOWEST USE OF THE COVID VACCINE?
Harehills South, Leeds: 38.5%
Waterloo Road, Wolverhampton: 44.4%
Stamford Hill North, Hackney: 46.1%
Haington, Oxford: 46.3%
Eyrezom, Middlesbrough: 47.9%
South Tottenham, Herrings: 47.9%
Harehills North, Leeds: 48%
Stamford Hill South, Hackney: 48.1%
Central and North Boston, Boston: 48.2%
Edge Hill, Liverpool: 49.1%
Harehills South has the lowest first hit rate (38.5%), followed by Waterloo Road in Wolverhampton (44.4%) and Stamford Hill North in Hackney (46.1%).
Other areas that fall below the 50 percent threshold include Heddington in Oxford (46.3 percent), Ayres in Middlesbrough and South Tottenham in Haringe (both 47.9 percent).
By comparison, the absorption rate of the first dose was 94.7% in Whickham in Gateshead and Whitley Bay North in North Tyneside.
The overall figure for the United Kingdom – which began launching in December 2020 – is 92.1 percent, according to Coronavirus Dashboard No. 10.
However, the government itself acknowledges how the level of absorption can be slightly out of sync, as NIMS population statistics are not perfect.
Professor Paul Hunter, an epidemiologist at the University of East Anglia, told MailOnline that it was “definitely disappointing” that there were still pockets in the country with low absorption, despite “overall high vaccine coverage”.
He said: “I suspect that many of these areas are areas with relatively high deprivation and / or have a high proportion of ethnic minorities.
“It is disappointing that the United Kingdom’s vaccination efforts have failed to persuade these communities to accept the vaccine.”
There is unlikely to be a “significant increase” in vaccine coverage among the country’s least immunized parts in the coming weeks and months, Professor Hunter said.
He added: “We are now crossing the peak of Omicron, most unvaccinated individuals have already had the infection and will have acquired immunity, so we are not starting with these populations.
“However, I would encourage people to get vaccinated, even if they have had an infection, as hybrid immunity seems to offer the best protection.”
Dr David Strain, a professor of medicine at the University of Exeter, told MailOnline that the low absorption rate in some parts of the country was probably due to the adoption of the vaccine, with “insufficient efforts” to provide information on benefits and safety the stroke is accessible to all.
He said it was “worrying” that the lowest absorption had occurred in the regions with the most ethnically diverse populations, as these were the same populations that seemed to have fared worse than acute Covid infections and therefore had the highest “To win a lot.”
Nearly 53 million first injections of Covid have been given in the UK since the start of the pandemic, with 92.1% of people over the age of 12 already receiving their first dose since the first was given on 8 December 2020.
About 49.6 million people, or 86.2% over the age of 12, have applied for their second dose, which is given four weeks after the first injection.
More than 39 million booster doses were given to the British, with around 970,000 doses given in one day in December as the country boosted its immunity to the Omicron wave.
About 45,000 Covid vaccines were distributed daily during the week until April 10, as thousands of Britons continue to apply for their first, second and third doses, as well as injections as part of a spring campaign to boost and introduce up to five 11 years old
More than nine out of 10 people over the age of 12 in the UK received their first dose, 86.2% had a double prick and more than two-thirds were boosted
However, as long as the rhetoric continues that “The Covid is over”, it will remain difficult to convince those populations who have a historical distrust of rapidly developed treatments that it is safe, effective and remains the best way to keep your whole family safe. said Dr. Strain.
With so many cultures celebrating, such as Easter, Ramadan and Easter, it would be “a perfect time to call on religious and community leaders to remind them that Covid is by no means over and vaccines are the only best source of protection.” added.
Vaccines have been credited with drastically dulling the threat of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus behind the Covid pandemic.
Before the blows came on the scene, Britain endured many days in which more than 1,000 people died from the virus.
But now, even when levels of infection reach the highest levels of the pandemic, deaths have not exceeded 300 a day – similar to the levels seen in outbreaks of bad flu.
The best scientists also attribute the numerous waves that Britain had to endure and the softer nature of Omicron so that the country can remove all restrictions and “Live with Covid”.
The UK is currently releasing fourth doses for people over the age of 75, placed in care homes of all ages and people with weakened immune systems, such as some cancer patients.
These groups qualify for a spring booster if six months have passed since their first booster.
Health officials are also planning to release another series of booster doses this fall. He could see millions more adults offering additional vaccines.
The spread of vaccination was expanded earlier this month to include five to 11-year-olds in England. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have already offered blows to this age group.
Vaccine advisers at No. 10 said the move would stop “a very small number of children from serious illness and hospitalization”.
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