Latest figures reveal how dramatically the covid rate of infection has fallen in the Harrogate district over the past month.
Data published by North Yorkshire County Council shows the seven-day rate of infection was 344 per 100,000 people on March 1.
On February 1, when the Omicron variant was rampant, the rate was 1,300 per 100,000 people.
Although the rate continues to fall, there have still been covid-related deaths reported at Harrogate District Hospital.
NHS England figures show that one death was recorded on February 28 and another on February 25.
There have been 232 covid-related deaths at the hospital since the pandemic started almost two years ago.
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From Tuesday, the rules for people visiting patients in Harrogate and Ripon’s hospitals will be relaxed.
Since December 23, visitors have only been allowed for patients on end-of-life care, patients with a learning disability or severe cognitive impairment such as dementia. Visits to parents or carers of children and birthing partners are also permitted.
But from Tuesday, patients can have one visitor, by appointment, between 2pm-4pm for 30 minutes. Only two visitors will be allowed in each bay at any one time.
Harrogate and Ripon vaccination sites reopen todayThe vaccination centres at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate and Ripon Races reopen today for the first time since Christmas.
The two sites are run by Yorkshire Health Network, which represents the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district.
The Yorkshire Event Centre at the showground will open for booked appointments from 11am until 8pm. Appointments are still available.
The site will also accept walk-ins from 11.30am today but people choosing this option may have to wait because bookings take priority.
The showground will be open at the weekend from 8.30am to 5pm for booked appointments and from 9am to 4pm for walk-ins.
All the clinics are for first, second or booster jabs for over-18s. Special clinics for 12 to 17-year-olds are put on separately.
Ripon Races will be open tomorrow and on Saturday at the usual times of 8:30am to 5pm for booked appointments and 9am to 4pm for walk-ins.
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Staff and volunteers at the Yorkshire Event Centre are due to relocate to another building at the showground on Thursday and Friday, ready for the Saturday clinic.
The new site is currently contracted for use until March. A decision on fourth vaccinations has yet to be taken.
The Harrogate pharmacies at the forefront of the booster campaign
Besides the GP-run vaccination sites at Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground and Ripon Races, nine local pharmacies are also at the forefront of the booster jab campaign.
Harrogate Pharmacy, at the back of Rawcliffe’s on East Parade, is amongst them. It has been offering vaccines since October and has so far delivered 4,000 doses at a rate of one every four minutes.
When the Stray Ferret visited to find out more about the operation, staff told us the past 18 months had been like no other but were adamant they wanted to do their bit to help.
They offer 300 to 450 vaccines per week, which are all administered by one vaccinator.
The pharmacy is now booked up until Christmas but about 10 people a day drop out so staff are happy to take calls inquiring whether there are spaces for walk-ins.
Shaun Davis, superintendent pharmacist, said more pharmacies should provide jabs to meet the government’s goal of offering all over 18s a booster by the end of the month. he said:
“They need to allow more sites to open a centre more easily — why can’t pharmacies who have offered a flu jab for years not offer covid jabs without all the unnecessary red tape? if it was to be made easier it could be a very simple walk-in service in any pharmacy.”
Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s announcement on Sunday night did not give vaccine sites much time to prepare for the sudden increase in capacity required.
“They can’t announce something yesterday saying you need it to happen today with no infrastructure in place to manage that.
“That kind of knee-jerk response to things is not very considered to me. It’s only around 40% of the population that have had their booster and if you want to get it to a stage of having a real impact on this variant they have to come up with a strategy to do this.”

Harrogate Pharmacy has been open throughout the pandemic. Staff have helped patients when GP surgeries and hospitals have been overwhelmed, as well as giving vaccines.
Charlotte Turnbull, supervisor, said:
“It’s been a lot of pressure. We took a lot of the brunt when a lot of doctors or hospitals were overwhelmed and because we are delivery-only a lot of people moved to us because we can drop it at their doorstep and walk away rather than them having to walk to a busy pharmacy.
“There needs to be more capacity and people on board, if they want all adults booked before new year.”
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Other pharmacies in the Harrogate district offering vaccinations:
- Chain Lane Community Hub – run by Homecare Pharmacy Services
Appointments are available on the NHS app for Thursday December 16 and Friday December 17 8am-6pm, Saturday December 18 8am-3pm, December 20 to 23 8am-8pm, December 28 to 30 8am-8pm and December 31 8am-3pm.
*Some of these dates have been extended today so new appointments are now online to book.
- Pateley Bridge Pharmacy – based at the Bishopside and Bewerley Memorial Hall
Appointments are available on the NHS app for Saturday December 18 9am-12pm and 1pm-4pm, Tuesday December 21st 8am-1pm and Thursday December 30 9am-12pm and 1pm-4pm.
- Chain Lane Pharmacy, Knaresborough
Appointments are available on the NHS app for Monday to Thursday 9.30am to 5.45pm
- P R Naylor Chemist, Market Place, Knaresborough
Appointments are available on the NHS app Monday to Sunday 9am-1pm, 2pm-4pm and 5pm-6.30pm
- Cohens Chemist, King Edwards Drive, Harrogate
Currently full until New Year
- Day Lewis Pharmacy, Leeds Road, Harrogate
No information available at the time
- Well Pharmacy, Wetherby Road, Harrogate
No information available at the time
- Day Lewis Pharmacy, Westgate, Ripon
Waiting on vaccine supply, keep an eye on our covid coverage for more information.
- Day Lewis Pharmacy, Market Place, Masham
Waiting for official approval then clinic appointments will be made available online. Keep an eye on our covid coverage for more information.
Knaresborough vaccine centre welcomes first 12 to 15-year-olds
Knaresborough’s vaccination site today welcomed the first 12 to 15 year olds through its doors amid concern about high coronavirus cases in the Harrogate district.
The government initially said that all children in that age group would be offered jabs on school premises by half-term.
However, the roll-out in schools locally has been delayed due to staffing issues at Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust.
So the NHS has asked Homecare Pharmacy Services, which recently moved to the Chain Lane Community Hub in Knaresborough, to help out with the roll-out.
William Kean, 12, from Harrogate, was among the first of his cohort to get vaccinated today. He told the Stray Ferret:
“I was a little bit nervous but it was fine, it didn’t hurt very much. I thought it was going to be worse. Hopefully it means I don’t miss as much school now.”

The Homecare team at the launch of the new clinic today.
Local public health officials have linked the high rate of infection in the Harrogate district to children returning to school in September.
The director of public health for North Yorkshire, Louise Wallace, revealed last week that she had urged schools to bring back face masks and reduce after-school activities as a result.
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Jason Baskind, managing director of Homecare Pharmacy Services, told the Stray Ferret:
“Obviously the school teams have been struggling to get the children all done. The initial offer has got to be through schools.
“But the NHS has asked us and other vaccination centres to put on these clinics for children because it’s half-term and because of the situation in Harrogate.”
Sue Vasey, interim director at the Chain Lane Community Hub, added:
Confusion and queues over covid jab appointments“It was really important for us to be able to offer this facility for such an important programme, particularly now when infection levels are so high in our area.
“We are always in need of volunteers but it’s a great atmosphere and a really good team. Everyone has really pulled together to make this work.”
People in their 30s have been left confused about where to get a covid vaccination in the Harrogate district, with reports of long queues at the Knaresborough site.
This week the NHS announced the vaccination programme was being rolled out to 30 and 31-year-olds, who were able to book a jab through the national appointment service from Wednesday May 26.
One reader described the scene at the Knaresborough site this morning as “absolute chaos” with a long queue of people down the road, waiting to get in.
She said she had an appointment but was told she would need to wait for about an hour and a half, or could come back later when another pharmacist would be available.
Steve Culleton, an estate marshal at the Knaresborough site, apologised for the delay and said once people were checked into the venue, the aim was to get them jabbed and through to the observation area in three minutes.
Longer waits outside were due to a staff shortage, incidents on site that took staff away from the flow of vaccinations, and a higher than usual number of people turning up with incorrect appointment times, he said, noting that roadworks in the town had not helped.
Mr Culleton said that the pharmacists and other site staff were not involved with bookings, which were all made through the NHS 119 and National Booking Service.
He said:
“I’ve seen 1,100 people today. The overwhelming sentiment from all of them is ‘thank you very much, we appreciate it’.
“It’s a mixture of people turning up outside their appointment times, [booking] glitches and the lack of a full complement of staff.
“We are genuinely sorry that people had to wait, because that is not what we want. We just want people to come in, be jabbed, be observed and go.
“We want people to have a positive experience and go home happy. We know that there will be a few who are unhappy and for that I wholeheartedly apologise. It’s not what they expected, it’s not what we expected but it’s the way today turned out.”
Some people in their early 30s said they found that sites in Harrogate and Knaresborough were fully booked for several days, forcing them to book in Leeds, Pateley Bridge or Bradford.
After making alternative plans, two readers told the Stray Ferret that they received text invites from their GP surgery to make appointments directly due to “extra” supplies of the Pfizer vaccine.
A spokesman for NHS North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group said there were two ways to get an appointment, depending on whether vaccination sites were administered by GPs or the NHS National Booking Service.
He said:
“The Harrogate and Ripon vaccination sites are administered by GP practices – and sit outside of the National Booking Service processes.
“Practices are contacting eligible patients, directly, though quite a lot of activity at the moment is fulfilling second-dose obligations.”
He explained the Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge sites were part of the NHS National Booking Service infrastructure and not linked to the CCG or general practices.
NHS England North East and Yorkshire said:
“On occasion, appointment slots can be booked up quickly and thus won’t appear in the list of options online. More appointments are added regularly, so people are advised to try again later if they can’t or would rather not travel to another venue.”
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More than 105,000 first doses of a covid vaccine have now been given in the Harrogate district, according to Public Health England.
A total of 105,579 first and 69,241 second vaccines have been administered in the district.
It means the take-up rate in the district stands at 74.3% for a first dose and 48.7% for a second dose.