Ọtụtụ ndị Briten agaghị akwado ụlọ ọrụ na-enweghị ọgwụ mgbochi

Ọtụtụ ndị Briten agaghị akwado ụlọ ọrụ anaghị agba ọgwụ mgbochi
Ọtụtụ ndị Briten agaghị akwado ụlọ ọrụ anaghị agba ọgwụ mgbochi

Less than half of Britons expressed willingness to keep using an unvaccinated professional.


  • 22% of responders said that would “definitely” no longer use services of unvaccinated professionals.
  • 29% of responders said would “probably” avoid unvaccinated professionals.
  • 20% of Brits would “probably” use unvaccinated businesses.

According to the latest poll conducted and posted yesterday, over fifty percent of UK residents would not return to a business they’d used in the past if the person conducting that business hadn’t been vaccinated.

0a1a 22 | eTurboNews | eTN
Ọtụtụ ndị Briten agaghị akwado ụlọ ọrụ anaghị agba ọgwụ mgbochi

As the country continues to warm to the government’s Ihe mgbochi COVID-19 on commerce and movement, less than half of Britons expressed willingness to keep using an unvaccinated professional.

Almost a quarter (22%) of those polled said they would “definitely” no longer do business with unvaccinated professionals, even if they had had favorable transactions in the past.

Surveying 4,631 British adults, the poll found that the plurality – 29% – of respondents said they would “probably” no longer use the professional they’d previously patronized knowing that they “had not taken and [were] not going to take the COVID-19 vaccination.”

20% of Britons were on the fence, acknowledging that they would “probably keep using” the professional, while 14% would stick by their professional, shot or no shot. The remainder were unsure – but they may have to make a decision soon, as the UK government continues to mull over a nationwide rollout of vaccine passports after declaring them a must to return to nightlife venues post-lockdown.

Respondents in the south of England were most likely to turn against their unvaccinated professionals, while those in the north were most likely to keep working with them. Likewise, conservative voters were more likely to keep their professionals, while Liberal Democrats were the most likely to cast them aside.

Poll respondents seem to be increasingly embracing the restrictions placed on their activities by the state, with 60% apparently backing “vaccine passports” for anyone visiting a nursing home, gym, event space, pub, restaurant, or other public gathering place in another poll conducted by YouGov last week. However, the question was phrased slightly differently, de-emphasizing the lack of a clear end-date to the usage of such passports by asking respondents only if they supported vaccine passports during the rollout of the jab.

The Brits would not be the first to have a vaccine passport system imposed without input from voters. Italy and France have already adopted health passes despite wide-scale protests, and some US states and municipalities like New York City have urged private American businesses to enforce vaccine mandates with their own health passports. Other states have pushed to ban such passports, leading the federal government to (for now) leave it up to the states and businesses.

IHE Ị GA-Ewepụ na edemede a:

  • The remainder were unsure – but they may have to make a decision soon, as the UK government continues to mull over a nationwide rollout of vaccine passports after declaring them a must to return to nightlife venues post-lockdown.
  • According to the latest poll conducted and posted yesterday, over fifty percent of UK residents would not return to a business they'd used in the past if the person conducting that business hadn't been vaccinated.
  • However, the question was phrased slightly differently, de-emphasizing the lack of a clear end-date to the usage of such passports by asking respondents only if they supported vaccine passports during the rollout of the jab.

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Harry Johnson

Harry Johnson abụrụla onye nchịkọta akụkọ ọrụ eTurboNews maka mroe karịrị afọ 20. O bi na Honolulu, Hawaii, ma o si Europe. Ọ na-amasị ya ide na ikpuchi akụkọ.

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