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United Kingdom Medicine

Half the UK's Adult Population Has Received at Least One Dose of Covid-19 Vaccine (bbc.com) 237

The BBC reports: The number of daily Covid-19 vaccine doses administered in the UK has hit a record high for a third consecutive day. A combined total of 844,285 first or second doses were given on Saturday, up from 711,157 on Friday. On Twitter, Prime Minister Boris Johnson thanked "everyone involved".

More than 27.6 million people in the UK — more than half the adult population — have now received at least one dose of a vaccine... Of the vaccinations administered on Saturday, 752,308 were first doses and 91,977 were second, meaning 2,228,772 people in the UK have now been fully vaccinated.

How does that compare to other regions? In the USA — which has roughly five times the UK's population — 81.4 million people have received at least one dose of vaccine, representating about 24.5% of the eligible population. But 41.9 million Americans have been fully vaccinated (according to figures compiled by the Washington Post).

And here's some more figures from the Los Angeles Times, including vaccination stats for the state of California — roughly 60% of the UK's population: The last six days have seen the six highest single-day totals of shots given out statewide, according to data compiled by the Los Angeles Times. During that stretch, roughly 2.35 million doses were administered statewide — including 344,489 on Thursday and 387,015 on Friday... To date, nearly 13.8 million shots have been administered statewide [and] 23.5% of Californians have received at least one vaccine dose — a proportion that ranks 33rd out of all states and U.S. territories, according to data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

By comparison, 31.4% of New Mexico's population has gotten at least one shot, as have 29.6% of Alaskans and 29% of those living in South Dakota. California measures up better compared with more populous states. As of Friday, 24.3% of residents had received one shot in Pennsylvania, 24.2% in New York, 22.2% in Florida and 20.9% in Texas, CDC data show.. Roughly 11.8% of all Californians have been fully vaccinated. California is somewhat ahead of the national curve when it comes to vaccinating its older residents. Roughly 71.9% of residents ages 65 and older have received at least one dose, according to the CDC, compared with the nationwide figure of 67.1%.

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Half the UK's Adult Population Has Received at Least One Dose of Covid-19 Vaccine

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  • Am I a bad person for not being vaccinated?
    • Re:Am I a bad guy? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by narcc ( 412956 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @01:25AM (#61184434) Journal

      Only if you refuse vaccination. That would be selfish and irresponsible. Otherwise, you're just unlucky.

      My wife and I are both fully vaccinated because we care about the people around us. If you have the opportunity, you should take it.

    • Re:Am I a bad guy? (Score:5, Informative)

      by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @01:52AM (#61184470)

      Are you working from home? Masking and social distancing when you go out? Avoiding mass gatherings?
      If yes then you're not a bad guy as far as COVID is concerned.

    • Considering it means you donâ(TM)t care about human life other than for yourself, obviously the answer is yes.

      • Considering it means you donÃ(TM)t care about human life other than for yourself, obviously the answer is yes.

        I'm a bad person through no fault of my own then. You have to be 50 or over to have the shot in my state, unless there is something else going on with you already.

    • Re:Am I a bad guy? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @02:58AM (#61184550) Homepage

      Am I a bad person for not being vaccinated?

      Yes, because you can spread it to other people if you catch it.

      And kill them.

    • by sidetrack ( 4550 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @03:27AM (#61184610) Homepage

      At the moment the vaccine rollout is supply-constrained, so by not getting a vaccine when offered you are giving up your place in the line.

      Once the vaccines are no longer supply-constrained, then you will mostly be putting yourself at additional risk by not being vaccinated, but you will also put others at a small additional risk by volunteering to be a host for SARS-CoV-2, with the associated risks:

      . Passing it on to someone who is unable to be vaccinated (directly or indirectly via your onward infection chain).
      . Acting as a host in which the virus gains an advantageous mutation.

      If you don't get the vaccine then at some point you will very likely be infected with SARS-CoV-2, it seems pretty clear looking at the data which is more risky (by a large margin), so I decided to go for a vaccination.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Do you want to be vaccinated?

      There is a real danger here that people who are either waiting to be vaccinated or who can't be for medical reasons will be unfairly disadvantaged.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Chance of death ~0.5%, chance of getting long covid may be as high as 10%. My workmate got Covid roughly 11-12 months ago and still has long Covid now, he's gone from super-fit to can barely walk round the block.

      That is why I've taken the vaccine. Ok, I'd also not want to attend the funeral of some-one who I infected and they died, that would suck bad.

      And about that blood clot nonsense, great job politicians in scaring people for no good reason, COVID is literally 2500x times more likely to kill you than a

    • Depends.
      Did you just not get it because you are still waiting in the Queue? No, You are not a bad person, you are patiently waiting your turn, very British.
      Did you just not get it because your Doctor says you have conditions where it may not be a good idea? No, you are following your doctors advice.
      Did you not get it because you just didn't get around to getting it? No, you may be lazy or procrastinating perhaps a bit fearful but not necessarily a bad person.
      Did you not get it because you figure if you catc

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        Did you not get it because you figure if you catch it you will deal with the risk? Yes, The big problem is if you catch it, it will takes weeks before you have symptoms while you are spreader it can go in contact with others.

        The same thing happens even if you *ARE* vaccinated with the mRNA vaccine.

        In fact, one could argue that it's even more likely with the mRNA vaccines, because their efficacy is in keeping you from getting seriously sick, so you are correspondingly less likely to even be aware you are

  • Making progress (Score:5, Interesting)

    by imidan ( 559239 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @01:21AM (#61184430)

    In my area of the US, due to increasing supply (and, I suspect, local vaccine hesitancy/hostility), I'm scheduled to get the Pfizer shot this week, although I'm classified in the last group of eligibility by priority. It's free, it will make me more comfortable in public, and also make me feel better about going in to work.

    I know a lot of people are against it for a variety of reasons. I have relatives who are against it, though they can't seem to explain why. I hope most of them get over it. And I hope we manage to get vaccines rolled out to the developing world as fast as is practical. From what I've read, one of the dangers is that the virus continues to mutate among unvaccinated populations, potentially reaching a point where the current vaccine is no longer effective, endangering us all again.

    I'm ready to be done with this part of the timeline. Let's get it done.

    • The sad part is in the USA if you're a smoker and a fat fuck you are eligible.

    • Re:Making progress (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @04:00AM (#61184646) Homepage Journal

      I'm just worried that people will not act responsibly once they the vaccine. Things can't go completely back to normal, there will still be a need for some care to be taken.

      Also now is the moment we really have to push hard to keep the gains made during the pandemic, particularly on working from home. This is when we cement the idea that being in the office should be the exception, not the rule for many people.

      • Also now is the moment we really have to push hard to keep the gains made during the pandemic, particularly on working from home. This is when we cement the idea that being in the office should be the exception, not the rule for many people.

        Why?
        I believe I'm more effective in the office with others also present. If you want to continue working from home I'm sure you have your reasons, but leave Covid out of this.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'm more effective at home, but I appreciate that not everyone is.

          For me the time and energy saved not commuting, sorting out lunch, work clothes, COVID safety etc. and the ability to have my own office makes me more productive. It also means I can work around core hours, so if I have an idea on the weekend or at 8 PM I can open up the laptop and work on it for a bit, rather than saving it for office time.

          It also takes the strain off the rest of my life, e.g. I can go to the pharmacy or take calls from the

    • I'm scheduled to get the Pfizer shot this week...

      You are aware of the side-effect of the Pfizer shot, right? Permanent bonerfication.

    • by waspleg ( 316038 )

      I scheduled my first dose on Saturday, dates were literally disappearing as I was looking at the calendar. Some sites are a month+ out. But, while this state went red last time - and usually does. This city does not. So it's not that surprising.

      One of the most common objections is a bullshit one about how it didn't take long enough to develop the vaccines. Remember, this is a new form of an already existing thing, people have developed vaccines for other SARS variants, etc. This is not new tech and no

  • I would expect most of those vaccinated in the UK to have got the Astra-Zeneca vaccine, which in its current incarnation does not protect against the South-African or the Brazilian strains. An updated vaccine is supposed to be delivered this fall.

    There is also the threat of an export ban [theguardian.com] of the vaccine from the EU because Astra-Zeneca has not been able to deliver as much vaccine as it has signed up for.
    These is projected to delay complete vaccinations in the UK by two months.

  • The story of how the UK got its shit together on vaccination is pretty amazing. Both the bet on which vaccines to back and the roll-out. Here's an article about the roll-out: https://www.sciencemuseumgroup... [sciencemus...oup.org.uk]

  • by alw53 ( 702722 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @10:24AM (#61185590)
    Britain's policy of prioritizing first dose over second dose has worked very well. New cases per 100K is at 9.98 compared to US 16.5, and deaths per capita is roughly half of US rate.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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