Wednesday, 22 July 2020

Covid-19 headlines from the UK

Coronavirus restrictions will 
remain if large numbers 
refuse vaccine, warns UK 
taskforce

21 July, 2020

Coronavirus restrictions will remain in place if large numbers of people refuse to take a COVID-19 vaccine, a UK taskforce has warned.

There are fears that millions of Britons may opt out of being vaccinated for coronavirus, with many swayed by debunked anti-vax claims spread online.

A number of scientific studies have debunked previous claims by anti-vaxxers, including the false claim that the MMR jab can cause autism.

But two recent surveys show a large proportion of Britons are either against a coronavirus vaccine or unsure about taking one.

On Monday, the government announced that it had signed deals with pharmaceutical companies to secure 90 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines.

That’s on top of 100 million doses of an Oxford University vaccine being developed by the company AstraZeneca. The findings from its first human trials, published on Monday, showed its vaccine is safe and induces an immune reaction.

Kate Bingham, chair of the government’s vaccine taskforce, criticised those backing anti-vaxxers.

Vaccination has been an incredibly positive force for good in global society and they are not helping themselves or others by pushing an anti-vax message,” she said.

Bingham said ‘if large numbers refuse to have it, I think yes there is an issue.”

She added: “We are now living in a world where we don’t have millions of children dying in childhood.

The last case of smallpox was in the 1970s. Polio is now very rare.

Vaccination has had a massively positive benefit to society and if we get large numbers of people vaccinated then the restrictions we are all currently facing will stop and we will return to normal.

But conversely, if large numbers of people of the right cohort, those who are at most at risk of COVID infection, do not get vaccinated, then the restrictions will have to remain and we will not be returning to normal until the vaccination is in place.”

Asked if the UK should introduce compulsory coronavirus vaccinations, she said: “That is a matter for the politicians, not for me.”

Bingham said on Monday she is hopeful a coronavirus vaccine will be available by the end of the year.

Boris Johnson said on Monday he could not be 100% confident a coronavirus vaccine will be ready this year or next year. (PA)

Boris Johnson said he could not be “100% confident” that a vaccine would be available this year or next year.

He said: “Obviously I’m hopeful, I’ve got my fingers crossed but to say that I’m 100% confident that we will get a vaccine this year – or indeed next year – is, alas, just an exaggeration, we are not there yet.

It may be that the vaccine is going to come riding over the hill like the cavalry, but we just can’t count on it right now.”

Two weeks ago, a YouGov survey revealed that almost a third of Britons may not take up a vaccine for coronavirus.

A separate survey published on Sunday by ORB International, which works with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, showed that 27% of Britons either don’t know if they will have the vaccine or are definitely ruling it out.

More than a quarter of people in the UK may refuse to be vaccinated against coronavirus, a worrying survey reveals.

Results will be released today for a global frontrunner vaccine, developed at Oxford University, showing whether it is safe and triggers a positive immune response.

But shocking figures show, even if this first step is successful, and the treatment is proven to work in the coming months, 14 per cent of people in the UK say they would be unwilling to be vaccinated.

Another 13 per cent say they don’t know if they would refuse a vaccine, according to a national survey.



Coronavirus will still be with us for decades even if we have a vaccine, experts have warned.
Prof Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust, told the Commons health and social care committee on Tuesday: "Things will not be done by Christmas. This infection is not going away, it's now a human endemic infection.”
The top scientist, a member of the Government’s Sage advisory committee, added: "Even, actually, if we have a vaccine or very good treatments, humanity will still be living with this virus for very many, many years.... decades to come."
The stark forecast is a blow for Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who said last week that he hoped for a “significant return to normality” by Christmas.



Professor Chris Whitty, England’s chief medical officer, has warned that the chances of a “highly effective” vaccine being ready for distribution by Christmas are “very low”.

Giving evidence to the Commons Health and Social Care Select Committee on Tuesday, Prof Whitty said although he was “cautiously optimistic” there would be a vaccine this side of Christmas, the chances of it being “actually highly effective is in my view very low.”

It comes as a Nobel Prize winning geneticist has warned the UK government risks sleepwalking into a “winter of discontent” unless clear governance structures are implemented for the remainder of the pandemic. Professor Sir Paul Nurse, a distinguished scientist and director of the Francis Crick Institute, criticised what he described as the government’s “pass the parcel” approach. Matt Hancock has since told MPs preparing for winter was a 'priority' for his department.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-news-live-uk-deaths-today-covid-cases-lockdown-update-vaccine-a9630891.html?fbclid=IwAR2jE8a2YNieDLsDT_8BIlXzUnVxg5Vg3Hzn5D5ndntZpiKNsR3OGowoe80


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8543121/Police-force-announces-wont-crack-shoppers-not-wearing-masks.html?fbclid=IwAR1gMqHLYCjjE9WUlEEha-dgcGK2qo3LBOKWIaXmv9tzUDvrH47hkc4hr34

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