The number of unvaccinated care workers in Bristol who face losing their job next week
One in 16 care home staff in Bristol have not received a single dose of the coronavirus vaccine, figures reveal, as the deadline for compulsory jabs looms.
From November 11, care home staff will be required by law to be fully vaccinated against coronavirus to work.
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Hide AdNHS England data shows 213 of the 3,365 people working in older adult care homes in Bristol were yet to receive a dose of the Covid-19 vaccine on October 24 – the latest available data.
It means six per cent of care home staff in the area face losing their jobs next week.
A further 403 workers who had received their first dose were still awaiting their second jab as of October 24, the figures show, just over a fortnight before the deadline.
The Covid jab rules for care home staff
Care staff across England were told to have their first jab by September 16 to meet the November 11 cut-off.
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Hide AdBut nationally, around 25,600 people working in older adult care homes, either employed by a provider or agency staff, were unvaccinated by October 24 – 6% of the workforce.
Some 51,000 were yet to get their second dose of the vaccine.
What care provider charity Care England says
Professor Martin Green, care provider charity Care England’s chief executive, said: “The adult social care sector cannot support the NHS this winter unless it is adequately resourced, staffed and recognised.
“We urge the Government to listen – in Care England’s recent workforce survey, 96% of members have reported that a workforce shortage is their primary concern in winter.”
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Hide AdDifferent figures from charity Skills for Care, estimate that across England 105,000 jobs were vacant on any one day in the adult social care sector in 2020-21 – a vacancy rate of around 6.8%.
This was lower than the level recorded in Bristol – 7.3%.
What Unison says
Gavin Edwards, Unison’s officer for care, said losing more staff during winter risks leaving people needing care with nowhere to turn.
He added: “Employers and unions in social care want to see maximum take-up of the vaccine.
“Jab rates were steadily rising and although the threat of being sacked will have persuaded some staff, it’s also prompted many others to leave.
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Hide Ad“Ministers should pause the jab deadline until at least the spring, to allow even more to get their jabs. Or better still scrap it altogether.”
Government response
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “Our message is clear: vaccines save lives and while staff and residents in care homes have been prioritised and the majority are now vaccinated, it is our responsibility to do everything we can to protect vulnerable people.
“We are working closely with local authorities and care home providers to ensure there will always be enough staff with the right skills to deliver high quality care.”
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