![]() Of these, 970 (54.3%) were unvaccinated, while 530 (29.6%) had received both doses of the vaccine. PHE hospitalisation data shows that between 21 June and 19 July, 1,788 people were admitted to hospital after testing positive for the Delta variant. ![]() PHE estimates that the vaccination programme in England has prevented 22 million infections, around 52,600 hospitalisations and between 35,200 and 60,000 deaths. The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is 96% effective and the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is 92% effective against hospitalisation after both doses. ![]() The vaccination programme has been successful in weakening the link between infection, hospitalisation and deaths and today’s data demonstrates the need to remain vigilant and follow government guidance, to ensure that we continue to reduce the risk.ĭata from Public Health England (PHE) shows our vaccines are highly effective against all variants of COVID-19. More time is needed to understand what this means and to identify any trends. Since mid-April there are signs of the relationship between infections and hospitalisations coming back together. when comparing the REACT infection data with official NHSE hospitalisation data, since mid-February there has been a weakening in the relationship between infections and hospitalisations and deaths.3.84% of double-vaccinated individuals who reported recent contact with a known COVID-19 case tested positive, compared to 7.23% of unvaccinated individuals and.prevalence is nine-fold higher in 13-17 year-olds at 1.56% compared with 0.16% in round 12.a substantial increase in prevalence in all age groups under the age of 75.of the 254 positive samples sequenced for variants, 100% were the Delta variant, compared to 78.3% in the last report at the end of May (round 12).during Round 13, the R number was estimated at 1.19, corresponding to a doubling time of 25 days.prevalence was highest in London at 0.94%, up from 0.13% in round 12, although this growth appeared to be slowing at the end the study period.those who were fully vaccinated may be less likely to pass on the virus to others than those who have not received a vaccine.double vaccinated people in the most recent round were estimated to have around 50 to 60% reduced risk of infection, including asymptomatic infection, compared to unvaccinated people.unvaccinated people were three times more likely than fully vaccinated people to test positive for COVID-19, with prevalence at 1.21% and 0.40%. ![]()
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