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                    | A  nurse prepares a dose of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine for Margaret  Keenan, 91, before receiving her spring COVID-19 booster shot at the University  Hospital Coventry, in Coventry, Britain April 22, 2022. Photo Agencies | 
                   
                 
                  Virus apathy threatens UK booster plan 
                     
(China Daily/ANN) -- Healthcare experts in the United Kingdom are  concerned that a growing nonchalance about the novel coronavirus could dilute  the nation’s next rollout of booster jabs, and let COVID-19 flare once again. 
Azeem Majeed, a professor of primary care and public  health at Imperial College London, told The Guardian that many people think the  pandemic is over and may, therefore, not be interested in consolidating their  protection with a booster jab this fall. 
“I think it’s very likely we will see a lower uptake  for the autumn COVID-19 vaccine boosters than for the first two vaccinations,”  he said ahead of the Sept 5 start of the booster programme. “We saw a lower  uptake of the first booster last winter, and for the second booster that was  offered to older people and some other groups in the spring. Speaking to my  patients, many of them say they feel they have had enough COVID-19 vaccines.” 
Majeed said protection will fade as a result. 
He said the apathy followed the nation scaling back  its COVID-19 defenses, including its mass testing programme and its legal  requirement for people to wear face masks. Majeed said the government has even  been talking about “post-pandemic recovery”, which reinforces the impression  that the pandemic is over and that encourages people to let down their guard. 
Adam Finn, a pediatrics professor at the University of  Bristol and a member of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation,  told the paper: “It’s a concern-especially since all other measures … have been  dropped.” 
And the message that the danger has not passed is  being made increasingly hard to impart in the wake of declining case numbers,  with the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics, or ONS,  showing that around 1.7 million people in the nation of 68 million-or around 1  person in 40-had the virus this month. That compares to around 3.5 million in  July. 
“Infections have continued to fall across much of the  UK to levels last seen in mid-June,” Sarah Crofts, head of analytical outputs  for the ONS’ COVID-19 infection survey, told the BBC. 
Deaths and hospitalisations are also way down. 
While the news is undeniably good,  healthcare professionals know another wave of infections could arrive this  winter and that the strain prevalent then could be more deadly, so a successful  booster programme is now crucial. 
                   
                  (Latest Update August 24, 2022)
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