Vaccination against the virus has lowered death rates among all groups, but Black and South Asian residents of the U.K. die from COVID-19 at higher rates.
Black people and other racial and ethnic minority groups in the U.K. are dying from COVID-19 more frequently than their white counterparts, the Associated Press reported. A government-commissioned report released Friday said that the disparity may be attributable to lower inoculation rates among the minority groups as vaccine hesitancy still remains present in the U.K.
Recently, though, he says,"we are seeing lower infection rates in ethnic minorities than in white people, but rates of hospital admissions and deaths are still higher, with the pattern now matching levels of vaccine uptake in higher risk groups." This may be due, at least in part, to a difference in vaccination rates between the groups, according to the AP. Roughly 90 percent of Britain's adult population has received at least one shot of a vaccine.
The government appointed Ali after it became clear that some ethnic groups were being hit harder than others by COVID-19.
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