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8 December 2020updated 21 Sep 2021 4:56am

How Covid-19 vaccines could rapidly reduce the UK’s death rate

There is a very real possibility of Britain largely eliminating the fatality risk of the virus by early spring.

By Harry Lambert

Eleven months after the sequencing of the Covid-19 genome, the first doses of the Pfizer/BioTech vaccine were administered in the UK today. The vaccine has been shown in clinical trials to have a 95 per cent effectiveness in preventing Covid-19 infections.

Only 800,000 doses of the vaccine have arrived in the UK so far, enough to inoculate 400,000 people over a 21-day period (two doses must be taken three weeks apart). At first glance, that is a relatively small number. Around 67 million people live in the UK. The first round of Pfizer vaccine will, therefore, only cover 0.6 per cent of the population, or one in 167 people.

In reality, the vaccine will have a far greater effect than that. Since the dangers of coronavirus are so age-specific, each dose being administered will cut the UK-wide risk of death many times over.

As the graph below shows, vaccinating small portions of the population will have outsized effects: vaccinating the 2 per cent of Britons most at risk could, for instance, cut the risk of Covid-19 deaths by about 40 per cent. (I’ll explain why in more detail below.)

 

The first wave of 800,000 Pfizer doses will soon be supplemented by more waves of supply. A total of four million doses of the Pfizer vaccine are, according to UK health chiefs yesterday, due in the country by the end of this month – enough to vaccinate two million people.

Those two million vaccinations should almost halve the UK-wide risk of death. This is evident from the Office of National Statistics’ Covid-19 fatality data. As the data reveals, 42 per cent of coronavirus deaths in the UK have been among those aged 85 and over. There are about 1.65 million people in the UK of this age, or around 2 per cent of the population. The four million Pfizer doses due across the UK in the final weeks of 2020 will be enough to vaccinate them all. Assuming a 95 per cent effectiveness rate, that would cut the fatality risk of coronavirus by 40 per cent.

The next stage will be to vaccinate all those aged at least 75. There are 5.7 million Britons in this category (or 9 per cent of the population). Those aged 75 or over happen to account for 75 per cent of fatalities of Covid-19 so far. In other words, vaccinating everyone aged at least 75 could cut 71 per cent of the UK-wide risk, again assuming an efficacy of 95 per cent.

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This level of vaccination will require 11.4 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine – or as little as 8.6 million doses of the Oxford University/AstraZeneca vaccine, if its experimental 1.5x dose is approved by regulators. 

There are two further key stages to keep in mind. First, vaccinating everyone aged at least 65 will further reduce the UK’s Covid-19 fatality risk, potentially resulting in an 86 per cent reduction in risk, as this age group and above has accounted for 90 per cent of deaths. This will require just under 25 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine in total.

The UK has ordered 40 million doses of the vaccine, with the “bulk” of those expected to be available and administered in January and February. By that point, Covid-19’s fatality risk may have reached a level comparable to flu. 

Finally, a further 25 million doses will take the cut in risk to 94 per cent, by vaccinating everyone aged at least 50, as well as those most at risk between 16 and 49 (accounting for 99 per cent of Covid-19 deaths so far) – this is the government’s plan.

There appears to be a very real possibility of the UK largely eliminating the fatality risk of Covid-19 by early spring. And if current plans are realised, much of the risk could be reduced even earlier than that. 

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