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Average daily booster jabs in UK drops below 100,000

Just 44% of all 18 to 39-year-olds are likely to have received an extra dose.

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Information signs above the M8 motorway in Glasgow encourage people to get a Covid-19 booster jab (Jane Barlow/PA)

The average number of booster and third doses of Covid-19 vaccine recorded each day in the UK has dropped below 100,000, Government figures show.

It is the first time the average has fallen below this level since data on extra doses began to be reported at start of October last year.

The average currently stands at 95,490 booster and third doses a day, based on the week to January 18.

This is down from an average of 234,333 a day at the start of this month, and well below the peak average of 886,797 recorded on December 22.

Nearly 69% of all adults in the UK are estimated to have received either a booster or third dose of vaccine – meaning just under a third have yet to have the jab.

HEALTH Coronavirus Boosters
(PA Graphics)

Take-up remains lower among young adults, with just 44% of all 18 to 39-year-olds estimated to have received a booster or third dose.

All people aged 18 and over are eligible for a booster if they are three months on from receiving their second dose of vaccine.

Third doses – the other type of extra dose – are available eight weeks after a second dose to people aged 12 and over with severely weakened immune systems.

Take-up of extra doses in recent weeks is likely to have been affected by the level of Covid-19 infections across the country.

People are not eligible to receive a vaccine within 28 days of having had the virus.

Data published on Wednesday by the Office for National Statistics showed that an estimated 3.4 million people in the UK had Covid-19 in the week ending January 15, down from a record 4.3 million in the week to January 6.

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