TY - JOUR T1 - Monitoring sociodemographic inequality in COVID-19 vaccination uptake in England: a national linked data study JF - Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health JO - J Epidemiol Community Health DO - 10.1136/jech-2021-218415 SP - jech-2021-218415 AU - Ted Dolby AU - Katie Finning AU - Allan Baker AU - Leigh Fowler-Dowd AU - Kamlesh Khunti AU - Cameron Razieh AU - Thomas Yates AU - Vahe Nafilyan Y1 - 2022/04/25 UR - http://jech.bmj.com/content/early/2022/04/25/jech-2021-218415.abstract N2 - Background The UK began an ambitious COVID-19 vaccination programme on 8 December 2020. This study describes variation in vaccination uptake by sociodemographic characteristics between December 2020 and August 2021.Methods Using population-level administrative records linked to the 2011 Census, we estimated monthly first dose vaccination rates by age group and sociodemographic characteristics among adults aged 18 years or over in England. We also present a tool to display the results interactively.Results Our sample included 35 223 466 adults. A lower percentage of males than females were vaccinated in the young and middle age groups (18–59 years) but not in the older age groups. Vaccination rates were highest among individuals of White British and Indian ethnic backgrounds and lowest among Black Africans (aged ≥80 years) and Black Caribbeans (18–79 years). Differences by ethnic group emerged as soon as vaccination roll-out commenced and widened over time. Vaccination rates were also lower among individuals who identified as Muslim, lived in more deprived areas, reported having a disability, did not speak English as their main language, lived in rented housing, belonged to a lower socioeconomic group, and had fewer qualifications.Conclusion We found inequalities in COVID-19 vaccination uptake rates by sex, ethnicity, religion, area deprivation, disability status, English language proficiency, socioeconomic position and educational attainment, but some of these differences varied by age group. Research is urgently needed to understand why these inequalities exist and how they can be addressed.Data are available in a public, open access repository. The data on vaccination rates by sociodemographic characteristics used in this paper are publicly available via the COVID-19 Health Inequalities Monitoring for England (CHIME) tool (https://analytics.phe.gov.uk/apps/chime/) and are readily available for reuse. ER -