The UK planned to make COVID vaccination compulsory for frontline NHS and social care staff, but ultimately did not. Sian Moore (University of Greenwich), Christina Clamp (Southern New Hampshire University), and Eklou R Amendah (University of Southern Maine) and colleagues look at vaccine hesitancy among this group in the UK and US, many of whom are BME, and how employers and trade unions tackled it
Joelle Grogan highlights some points of concern as regards the UK’s response to the pandemic, and ad...
Siva Thambisetty (LSE) reflects on the ongoing failure to increase countries’ access to COVID vaccin...
Oxford University stands to make many millions from its vaccine spin-out. Yet the deals it has done,...
Last week NIESR published new research for the Cavendish Coalition on the implications of Brexit for...
Waiving intellectual property protections for COVID-19 vaccines would help boost production and dist...
For many people in rural South Sudan, the health impacts of COVID have been invisible, in contrast t...
The burden of COVID restrictions fell unequally across the population, and some of those most affect...
For over a year, people’s lives were disrupted on an unprecedented scale by COVID-19. Now, as govern...
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequalities, including among the healthcare workforce. Based ...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
The UK’s vaccination programme has been a rare success during the pandemic. Lucy Thompson, Rebecca F...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
Sanna Read, Raphael Wittenberg, and Nicholas Mays summarise research carried out by a team from the ...
Melanie Henwood and Bob Hudson consider the recent guidance around visits to care home residents. Th...
Vaccine apartheid has its roots in colonialism, write Sophie Harman (Queen Mary University of London...
Joelle Grogan highlights some points of concern as regards the UK’s response to the pandemic, and ad...
Siva Thambisetty (LSE) reflects on the ongoing failure to increase countries’ access to COVID vaccin...
Oxford University stands to make many millions from its vaccine spin-out. Yet the deals it has done,...
Last week NIESR published new research for the Cavendish Coalition on the implications of Brexit for...
Waiving intellectual property protections for COVID-19 vaccines would help boost production and dist...
For many people in rural South Sudan, the health impacts of COVID have been invisible, in contrast t...
The burden of COVID restrictions fell unequally across the population, and some of those most affect...
For over a year, people’s lives were disrupted on an unprecedented scale by COVID-19. Now, as govern...
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequalities, including among the healthcare workforce. Based ...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
The UK’s vaccination programme has been a rare success during the pandemic. Lucy Thompson, Rebecca F...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
Sanna Read, Raphael Wittenberg, and Nicholas Mays summarise research carried out by a team from the ...
Melanie Henwood and Bob Hudson consider the recent guidance around visits to care home residents. Th...
Vaccine apartheid has its roots in colonialism, write Sophie Harman (Queen Mary University of London...
Joelle Grogan highlights some points of concern as regards the UK’s response to the pandemic, and ad...
Siva Thambisetty (LSE) reflects on the ongoing failure to increase countries’ access to COVID vaccin...
Oxford University stands to make many millions from its vaccine spin-out. Yet the deals it has done,...