The majority of people in hospital with Covid-19 in East Lancashire have received a vaccine dose, a council leader has said, as ministers were criticised for “blaming” a resurgence of cases on people who had not yet had the jab.
Mohammed Khan, the leader of Blackburn with Darwen council, said six of the nine coronavirus patients in the region’s hospital had received at least one jab. Only three of the Covid patients at East Lancashire Hospitals NHS trust had not received a jab when they were eligible, Khan told the Guardian.
He added: “It’s no good blaming people or blaming part of the community. They have to find out why [people have not had a vaccine] … This virus has nothing to do with nationality, nothing to do with faith – it will move anywhere.”
Matt Hancock, the health secretary, has been criticised for suggesting that vaccine hesitancy is driving the rapid spread of the Covid variant first identified in India.
He told MPs on Monday to “look at what is happening in Bolton hospital where the majority of people in hospital with coronavirus were eligible for the jab but have chosen not yet to have the jab and have ended up in hospital, some of them in intensive care”.
Khan said he did not know why three of the nine patients had not taken up a vaccine when they were eligible, and health officials would look into it. He said a small minority of people had concerns about the vaccine but the vast majority were “desperate” to get the jab, especially as cases have started rising again.
Blackburn’s vaccine uptake is only slightly lower than the regional average: 58% of over-18s have received their first dose, compared with 64% in north-west England. The town is receiving 1,000 additional doses a day to try to counter the virulent B.1.617.2 variant, which is spreading rapidly among younger people in poorer neighbourhoods after arriving from India.
Among the over-50s, the town’s vaccination rate is in line with England’s average: 94.8% of that age group have been vaccinated, compared with 95.4% in the country.
while bars show the breakdown of first and second doses.
Daily data only available from 11 Jan 2021.
Data: data.gov.uk, updated