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Showing posts with label Coronavirus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coronavirus. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 July 2021

UK Covid live: ‘extra precautions’ may be needed in England after 19 July, warns PM

Latest updates: Boris Johnson says England is in ‘final furlong’ in route to opening up, but suggests further restrictions may be used after 19 July


Scotland records record number of new coronavirus cases for third time in four days

Scotland has again recorded a record number of new coronavirus cases. Today’s update says 4,234 new cases have been recorded. It’s the third time in four days that the daily total has set a new record, after yesterday (3,887 new cases) and Monday (3,285 new cases).

About 10.5% of tests carried out were positive. That is up from 9.8% yesterday, but down from 11.6% on Tuesday.

There are 275 people in hospital with coronavirus, up 40 from yesterday. But the number of Covid patients in intensive care, 16, has gone down by three.

There have been six further deaths.

At a news conference on Tuesday Nicola Sturgeon, the first minister, cited Euro 2020 and Scotland’s low population immunity, relative to the other parts of the UK, as reasons for new cases in Scotland being so high at the moment.

New cases in Scotland
New cases in Scotland. Photograph: New cases/Scottish government

Last Updated: 22:04

47m ago

Public Health England has published its latest Covid surveillance report (pdf). As PA Media reports, it shows Covid case rates in all regions of England are continuing to increase. PA says:

North-east England has the highest rate, with 346.4 cases per 100,000 people in the seven days to 27 June, up sharply week-on-week from 175.3. This is the highest rate for the region since the week ending 10 January.

North-west England has the second highest rate: 325.3, up from 244.3.

Eastern England has the lowest rate: 87.8, up from 47.7.

This chart show how England is experiencing a third wave of cases


Is it safe for the EU to ease COVID restrictions for tourism?

The EU has agreed to reopen the bloc to vaccinated travellers despite new virus strains causing concern

With increasing numbers of people receiving COVID-19 vaccines, some countries are ready to welcome back tourists in time for the holiday season.

The European Union has agreed to reopen the bloc to vaccinated travellers. But it is up to the 27 member states to decide who can enter and whether they need to spend time in quarantine.

The pandemic has devastated tourism-dependent countries such as Spain, Italy and Greece.

So will the industry recover? And is it safe to reopen as new virus strains cause concern around the world?


COVID-19 tourism hit could top $4 trillion: UN

The coronavirus outbreak has brought international air travel to a near halt causing up to $2.4 trillion in losses.

The UN does not expect international tourism to return to pre-pandemic levels until 2023 at the earliest [File: Reuters]

The economic effects from the plunge in tourism since the coronavirus pandemic emerged last year could be more than $4 trillion, a United Nations report said on Wednesday.

The joint report by the UN’s World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) and Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) found the lack of widespread vaccination in developing countries was leading to mounting economic losses.

“Tourism is a lifeline for millions and advancing vaccination to protect communities and support tourism’s safe restart is critical to the recovery of jobs and generation of much-needed resources,” UNWTO Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili said in a statement.

He noted many developing countries are highly dependent on international tourism.

The outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic brought international air travel to a near halt for much of last year as many countries refused to allow non-essential travel.

That punched a $2.4 trillion hole in tourism and related sectors last year, and the report warned a similar loss may occur this year depending on the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

“The outlook for this year doesn’t look much better,” Ralf Peters from UNCTAD’s trade analysis branch told a news conference.

“The first three months were again bad, there was not much travelling happening. There is an expectation of a certain recovery in the second half of the year, at least for North America and Europe to a certain extent,” he added, crediting vaccinations.

With COVID-19 vaccination rates wildly uneven – with some countries having inoculated less than one percent of their population while others have topped 60 percent – the economic damage will be concentrated in those countries with low vaccination rates.

The report found “the asymmetric roll-out of vaccines magnifies the economic blow tourism has suffered in developing countries, as they could account for up to 60 percent of the global GDP losses”.

It noted they already suffered the biggest drops in tourism arrivals last year, estimated at between 60 percent and 80 percent.

“In international tourism, we are at levels of 30 years ago so basically we are in the ’80s … Many livelihoods are really at threat,” said Zoritsa Urosevic, Geneva representative of the Madrid-based UNWTO.

Although the tourism sector is expected to recover faster in countries with high vaccination rates such as the United States, the UNWTO does not expect international tourism to return to pre-pandemic levels until 2023 at the earliest.

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

PM announces four-week delay to Covid lockdown easing in England

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Boris Johnson says more time needed to tackle Delta variant but signals he will not tolerate further suspension

Boris Johnson has halted the final easing of lockdown restrictions in England and ordered a four-week delay to speed up the vaccination programme, but signalled afterwards he would not tolerate any further suspension.

The prime minister said 19 July was a “terminus date” and that all restrictions on social contact could be lifted, barring the emergence of a gamechanging new variant.

The chief medical officer for England, Prof Chris Whitty, suggested that within four weeks the additional jabs would offer sufficient protection to halt a surge in hospitalisations and said there would come a point where the country would be able to live with the virus in relative normality.

But Whitty and Johnson said a speeding up of second vaccine doses for the over-40s combined with a four-week delay could prevent thousands of unnecessary deaths. Although the data will be reviewed after two weeks, No 10 said it was unlikely restrictions would change.


Johnson said the data was now clear that two doses of the vaccine were needed to combat the Delta variant, first discovered in India, and said it was right to allow extra time to give millions more people second doses.

“Now is the time to ease off the accelerator, because by being cautious now we have the chance in the next four weeks to save many thousands of lives by vaccinating millions more people,” he said.

Whitty said nobody should think that from 19 July, the risk of Covid-19 would disappear – but signalled there was a point where the risks could be managed. “There will still be … substantial numbers in hospitals and sadly there will be some people who will go on to die of this – the question is a matter of balance,” he said.

“We will have to live with this virus – which will continue to cause severe infections and kill people – for the rest of our lives.”

Johnson is likely to face a significant backlash from Conservative MPs, some of whom warned that the public was reaching its limit, though polls suggest the majority back a short delay. A senior Tory MP accused the government of shifting the goalposts from making sure the NHS is not overwhelmed to avoiding all Covid-related deaths.

“I can just about tolerate this but it’s to the end of my tolerance levels,” they said, adding ministers should know: “This is it, no more – you’re out of lives.”

But a minister dismissed grumblings from colleagues, saying there was a “huge disconnect between a minority of parliamentarians making a loud noise and mainstream opinion”.

Announcing the delay, Johnson also slashed the interval between the first and second jabs from 12 weeks to eight for the over-40s, a step that has already been taken for older adults.

Whitty said the link between cases and hospitalisations had been “substantially weakened” but not “completely stopped” by the vaccine rollout.

Hospitalisations could hit the peak of the first wave if step 4 of the roadmap proceeds, according to modelling by the government’s Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M) committee.

He warned that given a 50% rise in hospitalisations in the last week, if the current trajectory continued and restrictions were loosened “then we would run into trouble” fairly quickly.

Weddings will be given a limited reprieve with lifting of the cap at 30 guests, but venues must stick with social distancing requirements and table service. The advice will still prohibit singing and dancing.

The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, has rejected business demands for an extension of the furlough scheme and business rates relief as sources close to him said he believed sufficient economic support measures were already in place to cope with a delay.

Hospitalisations have risen by 50% across England, while the north-west has recorded a rise of 61%. The vast majority of patients – over 70% – admitted to hospital are under 65, while the over-65s make up fewer than 30%.

This is a “complete reversal” of the picture during the first wave, Whitty said, pointing to the success of older people having had two vaccine doses in preventing hospitalisations.

The delay of four weeks should mean all over-40s who received a first dose by mid-May will have been offered their second dose by the week commencing 19 July when the final restrictions lift, and all over-18s will have been offered a first dose. From Tuesday, all those aged 23 and over will be offered their first dose.

Minutes from the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) also reveal that a four-week delay would be advantageous because it would push the easing of restrictions closer to the school holidays, when transmission of Covid is likely to be reduced.

The prime minister, who met Sunak, Matt Hancock and Michael Gove on Sunday to agree the delay, judged two of the four tests for easing restrictions had not been met – the tests that highlight the effects of new variants as well as increases in infection rates leading to possible hospitalisations and deaths.

Ahead of the decision, Gove, the Cabinet Office minister, also held a meeting of the first ministers in the devolved administrations and a cabinet call was convened. But the decision to announce the delay at a press conference provoked ire from the House of Commons Speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, who said he had had to intervene to force the government to make a statement in parliament on Monday.

On Monday, Public Health England also released encouraging data suggesting Covid jabs appeared to offer substantial protection against hospitalisation from the Delta variant. The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is 94% effective against hospital admission after one dose, rising to 96% after two doses. The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is 71% effective against hospital admission after one dose, rising to 92% after two.

Monday, 14 June 2021

Delaying England’s Covid reopening ‘could keep thousands out of hospital’


Research backs four-week delay on lifting restrictions to allow more people to get jabs

Ministers have been told that a four-week delay to easing all Covid restrictions would probably prevent thousands of hospitalisations, as Boris Johnson prepares to tell the English public they will have to wait up to another month for “freedom day”.

The government roadmap out of lockdown earmarks 21 June for the last remaining coronavirus restrictions to be lifted in England, but the prime minister is expected to announce on Monday that the timetable will be pushed back by two to four weeks amid a rapid rise in cases of the Delta variant first detected in India.

The Delta variant is rising across the UK, where it now makes up more than 90% of new coronavirus infectious. Public health officials are concerned about the variant because it partially evades vaccines, is at least 40% more transmissible than the Alpha variant first detected in Kent, and appears to double the risk of hospitalisation.


Johnson and senior colleagues were expected to make the final decision on Sunday evening, after the conclusion of the G7 summit in Cornwall, with the wider cabinet then set to be consulted. The prime minister will attend a Nato summit in Brussels on Monday before returning to Downing Street to deliver the news.

Any delay will infuriate lockdown sceptics on the Tory backbenches, who are concerned about the impact on hospitality businesses and have begun to claim they fear the government will never feel confident enough to lift restrictions. On Sunday, Johnson declined to answer the question of whether the delay could be for more than four weeks.


The latest modelling of the Delta variant shared with ministers suggests that even with the rapid rollout of vaccines, the UK will face a third wave of infections mostly among younger people who have yet to receive their immunisations. While many older people are now well-protected from two doses of vaccine, hospital admissions are still expected to rise because not all vulnerable people have had their shots, and some do not mount a robust immune response.

Modelling to be released on Monday shows that a four-week pause on lifting the restrictions would probably prevent thousands of hospitalisations as it would keep the brakes on the pandemic – albeit lightly – while more people receive their second shots. A surge in the coming weeks would hit the NHS as emergency departments warn they are already struggling with intense demand.

“In terms of emergency admissions, last month was the busiest since the start of the pandemic. We are much busier now in emergency departments than at the peaks of either the first or second wave,” said Dr Raghib Ali, an honorary consultant in acute medicine at the Oxford University hospitals NHS trust. “In other parts of the hospital we are catching up with a lot of elective work because of the backlog, so for both of those reasons it’s a very bad time to have additional pressure from Covid.

“Before vaccination, all a delay did was push cases into the future, but we can vaccinate millions of people in those four weeks and that will substantially reduce the size of the peak hospitalisations because of that increased coverage,” he added.

About 44% of UK adults are not yet fully vaccinated against Covid and more than 2 million of these are aged 50 and over. At the current rate of rollout, a delay of four weeks would mean another 9 million people could have their second doses. Half of these would have time to produce a substantial immune response by the end of the fourth week.

A further 7,490 people tested positive for coronavirus in the UK on Sunday, and a further eight people died, bringing the UK total to 127,904 deaths, according to government figures.

The importance of second shots emerged from Public Health England research which found that a single dose of Covid vaccine was only about 33% effective against symptomatic disease caused by the Delta variant. The protection ramps up substantially, to about 81%, with the second dose, but in either case the immune system needs at least two weeks to respond.

“There are a couple of things that are happening that should make a big difference in the next few weeks. First of all, vaccinations. Second, and slightly more subtly, schools will be out soon, and every week closer to that means less mixing in schools and more people likely to be off work, both reducing transmission,” said Prof Rowland Kao of the University of Edinburgh. “Both of those things, vaccinations and schools, means that the delay has real benefit right now.”

Postponing step four of the roadmap would also give scientists more time to collect data on some of the most crucial questions around the Delta variant. Key among these is how much has the vaccination programme weakened the link between infections, hospitalisations and deaths, given that the Delta variant is so much more transmissible, somewhat resistant to vaccines, and appears to cause more severe illness.

“To my mind it’s essential we give ourselves more time to get vaccination rates up,” said Prof Peter Openshaw, a member of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group that feeds into the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage). “It’s not good enough, where we are. We need more time for vaccinations and more time to see what the severity of the disease is like. If it’s causing double or two and a half times the hospital admissions, we need to understand that better.”

Graham Medley, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and a member of Sage, said: “The evidence has all gone into government, and I don’t want to comment as anything I say will be seen as a preference or a steer for the decision.

“It’s a government decision, quite rightly, how to balance the health and healthcare outcomes with all the other harms that Covid-19 and restrictions bring. The evidence from the epidemiology will all be published and open to scrutiny.”

#coronavirus  #globaleconomy #world news




Friday, 11 June 2021

Boris Johnson urged to keep English Covid rules in place beyond 21 June


Public health expert says social distancing and mask guidance should stay in place for foreseeable future

Boris Johnson has been urged to pull the plug on the final easing of coronavirus restrictions across England later this month, as he prepares to consider the latest data this weekend.

With just 10 days until the final stage of his roadmap, when all legal limits on social contact could be removed, the prime minister is under growing pressure to err on the side of caution given a surge in cases of the Delta variant, first discovered in India.

Jim McManus, vice-president of the Association of Directors of Public Health, said a complete lifting of measures risked cases and hospitalisations rising further, potentially leading to more variants that could undermine the vaccine rollout.

He suggested that social distancing and wearing face masks should stay in place for the foreseeable future.

“Relaxing our vigilance now, even after we have had the vaccine, could undo what we have all made huge sacrifices to achieve,” McManus said, adding that “patience now will pay off in the long run”.

He said the freedoms that came into force on 17 May allowing people to socialise indoors in groups of six or from two households should be maintained, but a full reopening delayed.

Johnson has repeatedly said he sees nothing in the data to suggest the final stage of unlocking on 21 June needs to be delayed, though the Guardian revealed this week that the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, was willing to accept a short delay if necessary.

The pressure from backbench Tory MPs grew as the former prime minister Theresa May laid into the government over restrictions on international travel. She accused ministers of sending mixed messages and overseeing a chaotic system, and said they should be upfront about the fact that Covid will never be completely eradicated from the UK.

“We are falling behind the rest of Europe in our decisions to open up,” she said in the Commons. “It’s incomprehensible that one of the most heavily vaccinated countries in the world is one that is most reluctant to give its citizens the freedoms those vaccinations should support.”

The former transport secretary Chris Grayling said decisions being made by the government would cost hundreds of thousands of jobs, force businesses to close and leave the aviation industry “decimated for the future”.

The former health minister Stephen Hammond accused the government of ignoring the data and making “illogical” choices about the green, amber and red lists that determine whether and where people arriving from other countries must quarantine.

Whitehall officials are collecting the final pieces of data and finalising proposals for the different courses Johnson could decide to take, with the prime minister expected to hold meetings with ministers over the weekend and on Monday morning.

A government source said the G7 summit in Cornwall, where Johnson and other world leaders are gathering this weekend, would “naturally make things more difficult” and “pile more pressure” on to the Monday morning

#coronavirus #globaleconomy

#healthcare