Health secretary Sajid Javid has announced a review will be launched over plans to make COVID vaccinations mandatory for NHS staff.
Health workers in England are meant to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by April, but Mr Javid has been under growing pressure to get rid of the rule.
The health secretary told MPs it is no longer proportionate to require NHS staff and health care workers to be vaccinated as a condition of deployment through statute.
He defended the initial policy – insisting the government “makes no apology for it”.
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Mr Javid told MPs there was a need to consider the impact on the workforce in NHS and social care settings, “especially at a time where we already have a shortage of workers and near full employment across the economy”.
He added: “In December I argued, and this House overwhelmingly agreed, that the weight of clinical evidence in favour of vaccination as a condition of deployment outweighed the risks to the workforce.
“It was the right policy at the time, supported by the clinical evidence, and the government makes no apology for it. It has also proven to be the right policy in retrospect, given the severity of Delta.”
However, former health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, voiced his concerns about Mr Javid’s U-turn.
Mr Hunt, who is health and social care select committee chairman, told the Commons: “Frontline workers have done an extraordinary job in this pandemic but I have yet to meet a single one who believes that anyone who comes in contact with patients has a right to put them to increased risk by not having a vaccine, unless there is a medial exemption.
“My concern is that having marched the NHS to the top of the hill, having actually won an very important patient safety argument, we are now doing a U-turn.”
But Mr Javid said it was right to review the policy after Omicron replaced Delta as the dominant COVID strain.
Announcing a consultation, he told the House of Commons: “Subject to the responses and the will of this house, the government will revoke the regulations.
“I have always been clear that our rules must remain proportionate and balanced, and of course, should we see another dramatic change in the virus, it would be only responsible to review this policy again.”
NHS doctor Steve James – who told Mr Javid he would not have the vaccine – told Sky News today that he had not changed his mind.
The consultant anaesthetist believes the “science isn’t strong enough” to support mandatory vaccines for NHS workers.
Boris Johnson, speaking during a visit to the Port of Tilbury, in Essex this morning, said he believes it is “absolutely clear” that NHS staff should get vaccinated.
The PM said: “My view on NHS workers, everybody involved in looking after vulnerable people, all healthcare professionals should get a vaccine. That’s absolutely clear.”
There were concerns that the sector could be left with a massive staffing crisis due to the number of workers choosing not to be vaccinated.
Both the Royal College of GPs and the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) had urged for the deadline to be postponed and the British Medical Association called for an “urgent impact assessment” on how the policy would affect staffing numbers.