Nine in ten NHS workers have received a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine

Christien PhebyContent Manager
March 25, 2021, 7:03 PM GMT+0

While just one in five (21%) had received both doses by March 10, almost seven in ten (68%) received the first dose

Data from YouGov’s Healthcare Professionals Survey of NHS workers across the country shows that nearly seven in ten health care workers (68%) have received the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, with another fifth (21%) receiving both doses. Just one in nine (11%) are yet to be vaccinated.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, patient-facing staff are more likely to be fully vaccinated (having received both doses) than non patient-facing staff: a quarter of NHS workers who directly come into contact with patients have had both jabs (24%) next to just one in ten non-patient facing staff (10%). Non-patient- facing NHS workers are also twice as likely to have had neither dose of the COVID-19 vaccine (22%).

Among the 11% of NHS workers who have not yet had the vaccine, two-thirds (65%) say they are likely to have it when it becomes available for people like them. A quarter (25%) of this group – a small section of an already small sub-sample – say they are unlikely to have the vaccine and 10% do not know either way.

The data shows that health workers have been vaccinated in greater proportions than the wider public – which makes sense, given their vital role in caring for the wider public. Daily YouGov polling showed that, as of March 2, 38% of the public said they had received either the first or second dose of the vaccine, while four in five (81%) of Brits who had not been vaccinated said they were willing to get the jab.

Receive monthly topical insights about the health and pharmaceutical industry, straight to your inbox. Sign up today.

Discover more health and pharma content

Explore more data & articles