- 04 October 2019
- 4 min read
Health workers have ‘professional responsibility’ to get winter flu jab
SubscribeHealthcare workers have a “very strong professional responsibility” to get the winter flu jab, officials have warned, after less than half of staff in some parts of the country were vaccinated last season.

70% of eligible people took the flu jab last season
A record 25 million people are eligible for the jab this flu season.
The jab will be offered to all primary school children for the first time this year, while a new form is available for adults that is manufactured using cells instead of hen’s eggs.
Some 25 million people are eligible for the vaccination, including those aged 65 and over, adults under 65 in at-risk categories, pregnant women and children.
Frontline health and social care workers should also be offered the jab by their employer.
Uptake rates are “improving remarkably”, with 70% receiving the vaccination last season – up from 50.6% in 2015/16.
Healthcare staff can spread flu
But Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England, told a briefing that some areas saw uptake rates as low as “in the 40s or 50s”.
He did not say which areas saw the lowest rates, but the trusts are understood to be scattered across the country and tend to have a dispersed workforce.
Prof Van-Tam said: “We do know that flu infections, while sometimes severe, can also be asymptomatic, and staff can spread flu without realising it.
“From a patient perspective, you don’t want to be in a situation where you feel that seven out 10 of the healthcare professionals you meet will be vaccinated; you’d like to be in a situation where nine or 10 out of 10 you meet are vaccinated.
“So I think there’s a very, very strong professional responsibility on healthcare workers to be vaccinated.”
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