Sunday 1 November 2020

Another lockdown in the UK


 

UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, has announced a second national lockdown in England as the number of the coronavirus cases in Britain soared over 1 million mark on Saturday.

“I’m afraid, from Thursday, the basic message is the same: stay at home, protect the NHS, and save lives,” Johnson said. 

The new restrictions were “far less primitive and less restrictive” than the full-scale lockdown of March and April, he assured.

From November 5 to December 2, people in England will only be allowed to go outside for specific reasons, including education, work, exercise, shopping for essentials or caring for the vulnerable. 

Pubs and restaurants will be shut down and only allowed to sell takeaway. All non-essential trade will also stop.   

However, essential shops, schools, and universities will remain open, the PM said, adding that games in the English Premier League would also continue in front of empty stands.

The furlough program will be revived, with employees who would be temporarily laid off due to the restrictions to get 80 percent of their salaries from the state, the PM promised.

In a separate statement, the UK's treasury said that businesses that will have to close during the lockdown would receive grants of up to £3,000 per month. Mortgage holidays for homeowners will also be extended, it added.

“The virus is doubling faster than we can conceivably add capacity,” Johnson said, explaining the need for urgent restrictions.

Earlier on Saturday, the number of coronavirus infections in the UK surpassed the one million mark. Britain also leads Europe in the number of Covid-19 fatalities, with 46,555 having already succumbed to the disease.

The PM previously insisted that the new lockdown would be a “disaster,” but the government moved forward with the major restrictions after scientific advisers warned that the “reasonable worst case” scenario of 80,000 fatalities could be well surpassed if measures weren’t taken.

https://www.rt.com/uk/505164-boris-johnson-england-lockdown/


Tomorrow Doomsday 😢 Furlough Ends & Businesses Give Up


Tomorrow will be a turning point for the country - is there any hope for the high street when we have another 6 months of this nonsense?


Spain has been gripped violence, with anti-lockdown protesters clashing with police in multiple cities, including Madrid and Barcelona, over the state and regional governments’ move to toughen Covid-19 restrictions.

Protesters torched garbage containers and erected makeshift barricades on Gran Vía, and reportedly smashed several store fronts elsewhere in central Madrid on Saturday night.

When police moved in to clear the unruly gathering, they were pelted with stones and flares, and reportedly fired blank bullets forcing the protesters to disperse into nearby streets....

https://www.rt.com/news/505171-madrid-barcelona-lockdown-clashes/


So much for the Blairite Labour Party




https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8900849/Coronavirus-UK-Sir-Keir-Starmer-says-Labour-Government-Commons-vote-lockdown.html?fbclid=IwAR1fEZ-HOebbS6hRp86mw1STrBINGoXjhJScE_C4tJk1XzyIYVTBtQmEAa8


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8900129/Boris-Johnson-facing-Tory-revolt-new-lockdown-Furious-MPs-lead-backlash.html?fbclid=IwAR3-Giq3bQKH01aeHg7194rBFiRHc-jIsmw4scG8C1g6i12AvCRP1mEXtWs

Boris Johnson effectively took the country back to square one last night as he unveiled a dramatic new national month-long lockdown to avoid a 'medical and moral disaster' - ordering the public to stay at home. 

After weeks insisting he is sticking to local restrictions, the PM completed an humiliating U-turn by announcing blanket coronavirus restrictions for England at a prime-time press conference alongside medical and science chiefs Chris Whitty and Patrick Vallance. 

Mr Johnson said the draconian measures - which come into force from midnight Thursday morning until December 2 - were the only way to avert bleak Sage predictions of 85,000 deaths this winter, far above the previous 'reasonable worst case', and the NHS being swamped before Christmas. He said otherwise doctors would have to choose between saving Covid sufferers and those with other illnesses.

'No responsible PM can ignore the message of those figures,' Mr Johnson said. 'We've got to be humble in the face of nature.'

Mr Johnson pointed out that the action was not the same as March as key sectors of the economy are under orders to stay open, but said he was'under no illusions' about how tough it would be.

He declared that the furlough scheme will be extended for the period, rather than ending tomorrow as originally planned. That could add another £7billion to the Treasury's spiralling debt mountain. 

Mr Johnson also refused to rule out extending the measures beyond the proposed end date. Asked if the time would be enough, the premier said: 'I hope so. We have every reason to believe it will be. But we will be driven by the science.' 

Reviving the government mantra from the height of lockdown, Mr Johnson urged the public: 'Stay at home, protect the NHS and save lives.'

But he tried to send a slightly more optimistic message, saying he hoped that the severity of the squeeze meant families would have a chance of being together at Christmas. 'I am confidence we will feel very different and better by the spring,' he added.

In his latest grim assessment, Sir Patrick suggested the NHS would be overwhelmed by mid-December, even with surge capacity and the postponement of elective procedures. He said there was the 'potential' for deaths to be 'twice as bad or more compared to the first wave'.

Prof Whitty said: 'The progress is steady and we now have several hospitals with more patients.. than they had at the peak in the spring.'  

The brutal squeeze - billed as 'Tier Four' on the government's sliding scale - will see non-essential shops in England shut, as well as bars and restaurants despite the 'absolutely devastating' impact on the already crippled hospitality sector. 

Households will be banned from mixing indoors during the period, and people will be told not to leave home and travel abroad unless for unavoidable reasons, such as work that cannot be performed remotely, or to take exercise. 

However, unlike the March lockdown schools and universities will remain open - despite unions warning they are key to the spread. 

When the rules lapse at the beginning of December the Tiers system will be reapplied, raising questions about what metric will be used to judge whether an area can have restrictions loosened.  

West Yorkshire will not enter the highest Tier 3 restrictions on Monday as planned because of the new England lockdown, the West Yorkshire Combined Authority said.

The hospitality industry warned it faces disaster and millions of job losses following the news of the crackdown, even though the government has pledged to pump in more money. 

Mr Johnson previously slapped down demands for a 'circuit-breaker' - a form of which has already been implemented in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland - instead extolling the virtues of his 'tiered' system of local measures. 

But he sounded defiant tonight, dismissing accusations from Labour's Sir Keir Starmer that his delay had cost lives and saying the policy had been 'right' before. 'It is true the course of the pandemic has changed,' Mr Johnson said.  

Nicola Sturgeon made clear this afternoon that she does not intend to shift her policy based on the new arrangements for England. She said: 'We will base decisions on circumstances here - though what happens just across our border is clearly not irrelevant to our considerations.' 

Another 326 UK fatalities were declared today - nearly double last Saturday's tally. But infections, which can represent the current situation more accurately, were down five per cent on a week ago at 21,915 in a possible sign that the rise could already be slowing. 

Hawkish Conservative backbenchers are threatening to revolt in Parliament when the measures come to a vote on Wednesday - the first time curbs have come before MPs in advance of being introduced.   

As England braces for a second national lockdown: 

  • The government said a further 326 people have died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19. Some more 21,915 lab-confirmed cases have been recorded; 
  • The National Education Union called for schools and colleges to be shut as part of the lockdown as they play a key role in spreading the virus; 
  • Health Minister Nadine Dorries claimed that the government could only have predicted the need for a second national lockdown with a 'crystal ball'; 
  • A SAGE scientist warned Covid is 'running riot' across all age groups and hospitals are treating four times as many women aged 20-40; 
  • The number of virus patients in hospital has doubled in the past fortnight, with 10,708 patients being treated by the NHS. 
  • The ONS said 50,000 people were becoming infected with coronavirus each day, with a further 274 fatalities reported yesterday; 
  • A poll by anti-lockdown group Recovery found that more than 70 per cent of people were more worried about the effect of lockdown than they were of catching Covid. 

At his press conference, Mr Johnson insisted the new national lockdown is not the same as the 'full scale lockdown' of the spring.

'We will get through this but we must act now to contain this autumn's surge,' he said.

'We're not going back to the full scale lockdown of March and April, the measures I've outlined are less restrictive.

'But I'm afraid from Thursday the basic message is the same: Stay at home, protect the NHS and save lives.'

Mr Johnson said overrunning of the NHS would be a 'medical and moral disaster, beyond the raw loss of life'.

He said: 'Doctors and nurses would be forced to choose which patients to treat, who would get oxygen and who wouldn't, who would live and who would die.

'Doctors and nurses would be forced to choose between saving Covid patients and non-Covid patients.

'The sheer weight of Covid demand would mean depriving tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, if not millions of non-Covid patients of the care they need.'

He added: 'The risk is, for the first time in our lives, the NHS will not be there for us.'

In what amounts to a plea for the public and Tory MPs to trust him, Mr Johnson said: 'We know the cost of these restrictions – the impact on jobs and livelihoods, and people's mental health. No-one wants to be imposing these measures.'

He thanked people who had been 'putting up with' local restrictions.

But he warned: 'We've got to be humble in the face of nature… the virus is spreading even faster than the reasonable worst case scenario of our scientific advisers.

'Unless we act, we could see deaths in this country running at several thousand a day – a peak of mortality, alas, bigger than the one we saw in April.'

Mr Johnson said that Christmas is likely to be 'very different' this year, but there still might be scope for families to spend it together. 

'Christmas is going to be different this year, perhaps very different. But it's my sincere hope and belief that by taking tough action now we can allow families across the country to be together,' he said.

Mr Johnson confirmed that the Westminster government was speaking to the devolved administrations in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland about 'plans for Christmas and beyond'.

Saying education would be protected this time around, Mr Johnson said: 'We're not closing schools, it's very very important that we're keeping schools open. 

'We want to keep going. People of course should work from home, and we want to minimise contact. That's the way to protect the NHS. I'm not gonna pretend to you that these judgments aren't incredibly difficult. We have to find the right balance.' 

Prof Whitty said the number of people in NHS beds in England will exceed the peak of the first wave without further measures.

He said there was an increase in prevalence 'in virtually every part of the country', apart from possibly the North East where stricter measures are in place, and cases are not constrained to one age group.

Discussing NHS bed use in England, he said: 'Currently only in the North West is this coming close to the peak that we previously had, but it is increasing in every area.

'And if we do nothing, the inevitable result is these numbers will go up and they will eventually exceed the peak that we saw in the spring of this year.'

Prof Whitty dodged when pressed on whether he thought the government had acted too late. 

'There is basically no perfect time and there are no good solutions, all the solutions are bad, and what we're trying to do is have the fewest – the least bad – set of solutions at a time which you actually achieve the kind of the balance that needs to be struck between all these things that ministers have to make decisions on.

'In terms of festivities, whether it's Christmas or any other religious tradition, we would have a much better chance of doing it with these measures than we would if these measures were not being taken today.

'I think let us see how this goes over the next few weeks.' 

Earlier, Cabinet was presented with evidence from the SPI-M group that the NHS will exceed its normal and surge bed capacity by the first week in December unless action is taken. Ministers were told that would be the case even if elective operations were postponed or cancelled.

Cabinet was also warned that the growth is national, and while the prevalence in parts of the North was highest, the R was above the critical level of one everywhere.

The doubling time in the South East is now quicker than in the North West, and the South West could be in the same position as the North West by November 27. 

Under the new restrictions, people will be told they can only leave home for specific reasons, such as to do essential shopping, for outdoor exercise, and for work if they are unable to work from home. 

But the government is stressing that businesses that cannot operate remotely - such as construction - should continue as before.

International travel is set to be out of bounds if not for work purposes, and travel within the UK will be heavily discouraged. 

Restaurants and bars will only be allowed to operate a takeaway service.

There is expected to be more government support for those businesses affected. 

Sir Keir welcomed the national lockdown for England but said it should have happened 'weeks ago', warning that the delay will cost lives and cause restrictions to last for longer.

The Labour leader told reporters: 'Everybody is concerned about the rise in infections, the hospital admissions and tragically the number of deaths. That's why three weeks ago, I called for circuit-break.

'The Government completely rejected that only now to announce the self-same thing.

'Alas the delay now will cost, the lockdown will be longer, it'll be harder and there's a human cost which will be very, very real.

'Now, there's no denying these measures are necessary and I'm glad that the Government has finally taken the decision that it should have taken weeks ago.' 

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden subsequently confirmed that TV and film production would be able to continue during the lockdown period.

Mr Dowden said further details of how the lockdown would affect the arts and sports sectors would be announced in the coming days.

Writing on Twitter, he said: 'As the Prime Minister has just confirmed we will be taking additional restrictions from Thursday. We understand the anxiety & impact these will have, and will ensure they last not a day longer than necessary.

'The changes mean people should WFH where possible. But where this is not possible, travel to a place of work will be permitted – e.g. this includes (but not exhaustive) elite sport played behind closed doors, film & tv production, telecoms workers.

'We understand people will have a lot of questions and @DCMS officials & ministers will be working through these and detailed implications with sectors over the coming days.'

The Government is currently distributing a £1.57billion funding package to the arts, as well as further measures.

However, Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association, said the announcement left the sector facing 'financial armageddon'.

He said: 'The announcement from the Prime Minister today will leave night time economy businesses facing a 'financial armageddon'. It is the most horrific of Halloweens.

'It's frightening to think that given the gravity of the situation, we are still being given limited communication, consultation or time to respond, or plan around these decisions.

'The entire night time economy consisting of thousands of businesses and hundreds of thousands of workers are suffering.

'Their plight is being made even worse by the huge void in financial support for the sector.

'Many of our businesses have experienced extreme financial hardship, been presented with unmanageable operational measures and have in some cases been forced into complete closure since March.'

Mark Davyd, chief executive of the Music Venue Trust, called on the Government to offer the live events industry further financial support.

He said: 'National lockdowns have been announced in France, Germany and the UK.

'In France, the government has announced it will cover 100 per cent of wages for people impacted by the required lockdown. In Germany, the government will cover 75 per cent of lost turnover.

'Across the country, grassroots music venues have been told to close from Thursday, but we have no similar commitment from the UK Government.

'We look forward to urgent details from ministers on the financial package that will protect businesses and livelihoods in this vital, world leading British industry.'

Professor John Edmunds, who attends Sage, confirmed earlier that the situation in the country is worse than the reasonable worst-case scenario.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today: 'We've been significantly above that reasonable worst-case scenario for some time actually.'

Prof Edmunds said it was 'possible' that there would be 85,000 coronavirus deaths this winter - more than there were in the first wave.

'It is really unthinkable now, unfortunately, that we don't count our deaths in tens of thousands from this wave.'

But furious debate has been raging within the scientific community over whether the Government should press ahead with plans for a national lockdown. 

Fellow Sage colleague professor Calum Semple said: 'For the naysayers that don't believe in a second wave, there is a second wave.

And unlike the first wave, where we had a national lockdown which protected huge swathes of society, this outbreak is now running riot across all age groups.'

He also said there were 'many more cases particularly in younger females between the ages of 20 and 40'. 

Other top scientists poured scepticism on the effectiveness of tougher measures.

Professor Sunetra Gupta from Oxford University said lockdowns do not build up the immunity required to beat back the disease.

She said: 'I don't believe there's been an increase in death rates. There have been increases in infection which is very much in line with what you'd expect if lockdown prevented immunity from building up.

She added that the vulnerable should shield while everyone else mixes to build up a level of immunity: 'Infections are building now, because some areas do not have the immunity we would have expected had we not gone into complete lockdown.'

Professor Sikora, a former WHO cancer programme director, this morning told MailOnline: 'It makes no sense, the other problem is even if you lower the R number when you come out of it it just bounces back up.'

He added: 'It's much more sensible to do a regional approach, just carry on doing what we're doing. Down in Cornwall there's no point doing everything.'

Asked who is driving the lockdown in Government, Prof Sikora said: 'It's Sage, they're all a bunch of epidemiologists, they're not treatment doctors and they forget that the mathematical model just excludes people with other illnesses such as cancer, heart disease and strokes and lockdown results in more problems for them to access care. People are less willing to go to hospital in lockdown.' 

Mark Drakeford, First Minister of Wales - where non-essential retail has been ordered to shut as part of a 'firebreak' lockdown - said on Twitter his Cabinet would meet tomorrow to 'discuss any potential border issues for Wales in light of any announcement by No 10'.

He added: 'Any announcement by @10DowningStreet will relate to England.

'The Welsh firebreak will end on Monday, November 9.'

Hawkish Tory MPs are signalling they will resist the measures in Parliament. 

Tory MP Sir Desmond Swayne told MailOnline the Commons must sign off on any lockdown. 'There should absolutely definitely be a vote. I don't doubt that the government will win it,' the former minister said.

'But those of us who want to express our dissent as elected representatives have every right to do so. We are a democracy after all.

'I don't doubt it is a difficult decision, but that doesn't alter it being the wrong decision. The things that it does to our economy our health and everything else is worse than the disease they are combating.'

Sir Desmond added: 'The long term average for excess deaths is about normal for the time of year and yet we are being told we need to do all kinds of catastrophic things to prevent the virus from spreading.'

Former minister Bob Syms tweeted: 'The Govt would be unwise to bypass Parliament and most Tory MPs very uncomfortable with this change of policy I hope chief whip explains to PM the numbers.' 

Ex-Cabinet minister Sir John Redwood told Today: 'I'm full of foreboding about it and before we give support for such a measure there needs to be a convincing case about how much good the measures proposed will do to save lives. 

'And against that we need an honest explanation of how much more damage it will do to jobs, livelihoods and the economy, because we are impairing people's ability go to work and earn a living, we are destroying good businesses we are closing down large numbers of cafes restaurants and hospitality businesses and there needs to be balance.' 

Andrew Bridgen MP told MailOnline: 'These are huge decisions that the government has to make with enormous economic and political ramifications.' 

'The Sage so-called experts won't be held to account for the correctness of their decisions at the next general elections. We will.' 

But there was a glimmer of hope for Mr Johnson this afternoon with rebel ringleader Steve Baker urging colleagues to listen 'extremely carefully' to what Mr Johnson says.

Speaking outside No 10 after being called in for a briefing, Mr Baker told Sky News: 'Today what I've had is the opportunity to take a team into Downing Street, there were three scientists, myself, a data analyst.

'We've had an amazing opportunity to robustly scrutinise the arguments, the data, the forecasts of where we're going, and what I would say to people is the Prime Minister has a got very, very difficult choices to make.

'And I would encourage all members of the public, and all members of Parliament, to listen extremely carefully to what the Prime Minister says today and over the coming days.'

Meanwhile, health minister Nadine Dorries - the first MP to test positive for Covid-19 in March - dismissed criticism that the government is acting too late, saying cases among the over-60s were rising faster than expected.

Writing on Twitter, Ms Dorries said: 'If only we had a crystal ball and could actually see how many over 60s would be infected, the positivity rate, the infection rate and the subsequent lag giving us the 14 day anticipated demand on hospital beds on any particular day, three weeks in advance.'

Labour MP for Nottingham South Lilian Greenwood was among MPs to criticise Ms Dorries' comments.

She tweeted: '2 weeks ago, Nadine Dorries said the whole of Notts didn't need to go into Tier 3. Looking at the numbers we'd just presented to us by Public Health England it was plain it would.

'Didn't need a crystal ball, just the ability and willingness to look and listen.'

Frontbencher Wes Streeting added: 'Astonishing to see a Health Minister – yes, a Health Minister – suggesting that only a crystal ball could have seen the need for a second lockdown. It was in the SAGE MINUTES.'

Earlier Jon Dobinson, of Recovery, said: 'The concept of a four-week lockdown to save Christmas is yet more cruel and inhumane policy which will further fuel the growing mental health crisis – all justified by holding out a false hope.

'People are dying in their thousands from lockdown and restrictions: it's time to focus on that.'

Professor Jeremy Farrar, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said of the prospect of a new lockdown: 'To bring Covid-19 under control, we have to act now. The virus will not wait for us.'

The infectious disease expert wrote on Twitter: 'Nobody 'wants' a lockdown, myself very much included. Full & generous support for people & businesses is a crucial part of making it work.

'But we have quickly breached the reasonable worst-case scenario, we are further ahead in this phase of the epidemic than many have assumed.

'The best time to act was a month ago but these are very tough decisions which we would all like to avoid. The second-best time is now.'

Professor Gabriel Scally, a Sage member and president of the epidemiology and public health section at the Royal Society of Medicine, said on Twitter: 'It is possible to be very concerned about the impact of the pandemic on mental health and the treatment of non-Covid conditions, and still believe that stricter measures are the best and most necessary course of action. The more the virus spreads the less capacity the NHS has.

Sage member Professor Christina Pagel, from UCL, added that another national lockdown is 'inevitable'. The director of clinical operational research told Sky News: 'Broadly speaking, Covid is spreading, particularly in England and Wales. 

'I suspect Wales' cases will come down next week as their firebreak starts to take effect. 'But basically it's spreading everywhere and at the moment it's spreading mainly in Tier 1 areas.' 

Asked if a second national lockdown is worth damaging the economy and people's mental health, she said: 'I think it's inevitable, and given that it's inevitable I think the sooner you do it the quicker it's over and the more lives you save.' 

There were also reports of more Tory infighting, with claims by older MPs that the lockdown revolt by Conservative MPs in northern 'Red Wall' seats was led by 'selfish young MPs who have nothing to fear personally' from Covid because of their age.

One Conservative elder statesman said: 'Many of our MPs who won Red Wall seats last year and are making the most fuss about lockdowns are young and are not at risk personally. 

'They should think about their constituents in their 60s and over who are at much greater risk.'

The senior Tory, who is over 60, singled out four MPs who have been most outspoken – William Wragg, who represents Hazel Grove, Manchester, aged 32; Jake Berry, Rossendale and Darwen, 41; Chris Green, Bolton West, 47; and Dehenna Davison, Bishop Auckland, 27. 

Bars shut, shopping restricted and no indoor sports: What will the new lockdown mean for you

A new national lockdown across England means people must stay at home unless for specific reasons, such as attending school or college, or going to the supermarket.

When do the new rules come into force?

The new national lockdown will run from Thursday November 5 until Wednesday December 2.

The lockdown will then be eased on a regional basis according to the latest coronavirus case data at that time.

Can I leave my home?

Yes but only for specific reasons such as education, work if you cannot work from home and for exercise, which you can take as many times a day as you wish.

People can also leave for recreation with their own household, or on their own with one person from another household (a 'one plus one' rule).

Examples of recreation include meeting up with a friend in the park for a walk or to sit on a bench and eat a sandwich. People will not be allowed to meet in homes and gardens, and golf clubs will remain shut.

People can also leave home to shop for food and essentials and to provide care for vulnerable people or as a volunteer.

Attending medical appointments is also allowed or to escape injury or harm (such as for people suffering domestic abuse).

Support bubbles will remain in place and people can still meet up in their bubble.

Children can move between the homes of their parents if their parents are separated.

What will close?

Non-essential shops, leisure and entertainment venues will all be closed.

Click and collect can continue and essential shops such as supermarkets will remain open.

Bars, pubs and restaurants must stay closed except for delivery or take-away services.

Hairdressers and beauty salons will close.

What if I shielded last time?

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said people over 60 and those who are clinically vulnerable are being told to be especially careful to follow the rules and minimise their contact with others.

Anyone who was formally notified that they should shield last time and not go out to work will be advised not to go out to work this time.

However, formal shielding as happened during the March and April lockdown – where people were told not to leave home for any reason – will not be brought in.

Should my children go to school or to the childminder? Can they go to a playground?

Yes, schools, colleges and universities will all remain open.

Childminders and nurseries will stay open and childcare bubbles, where for example a grandparent provides childcare while a parent works, will be able to continue.

After-school clubs and sports clubs will be suspended until December 2.

Playgrounds and parks will remain open.

Can I go on holiday?

No, you are advised not to travel unless for essential reasons. People can travel for work.

Those who are already on holiday will be able to return to the UK.

Is there a furlough scheme?

Yes, furlough will be payable at 80 per cent for the duration of the package of tougher national measures.

Can I go to church?

Churches will remain open for private prayer.

Funerals are limited to close family members only. It is currently unclear what the rules are for weddings.

Will Premier League football matches continue?

Yes. Boris Johnson said games would continue despite the restrictions.

What if I live in an area with lower cases?

You must still observe the rules as they apply across England. Professor Chris Whitty said that many of the areas with lower case numbers have the highest rates of increase.

He also warned: 'Some areas including the South West are likely to get pressure on beds really relatively early because of the way the NHS is constructed in those areas.'

 

The data 'forcing Boris into lockdown': SAGE release papers showing they sounded alarm two weeks ago, UK is headed for 'worse than worst case scenario' including 85,000 deaths - and 52,000 are catching virus every day 

The Government's SAGE advisers released papers yesterday evening that showed how they warned ministers two weeks ago that Britain could be headed for a more serious situation than their 'worst case scenario'

The Government's SAGE advisers released papers yesterday evening that showed how they warned ministers two weeks ago that Britain could be headed for a more serious situation than their 'worst case scenario'

The revelation that Boris Johnson is plunging Britain into a new national lockdown followed days of briefings and leaks from government advisers - who say coronavirus cases in the UK are accelerating faster than their worst case scenario and the nation could face 1,000 deaths a day within a month.

It culminated with the release last night of papers from a meeting of the Government's SAGE committee that showed how they warned ministers two weeks ago that Britain could be headed for a more serious situation than their 'worst case scenario'.

The document, dated October 14, which was released online, said 'we are breaching the number of infections and hospital admissions in the Reasonable Worst Case planning scenario' before adding that the outlook for Covid-19's future spread was 'concerning' if no action was taken.

According to briefings from advisers yesterday, they believe there is still time to save Christmas with a lockdown of at least a month that closes restaurants, pubs and all but essential shops.

The experts believe soaring cases mean the UK could face 1,000 deaths a day within a month and exceed 85,000 coronavirus deaths. Yesterday a further 274 fatalities were reported, compared with 136 a fortnight ago. 

The SAGE papers from two weeks ago warned that modelling suggested that up to 74,000 people a day could be becoming infected in England alone, far beyond the worst case scenario. 

There is a lag of around three weeks between infections and deaths. The scientists told ministers that without further restrictions, the death toll will keep rising exponentially, and hospitals will be overwhelmed. 

Separate Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures released yesterday found daily coronavirus infections in England surged by 50 per cent last week. It estimated almost 52,000 people were catching the virus every day and one in every 100 people in the country were infected with Covid-19 a week ago. 

The weekly update is far lower than another Government-funded study, called REACT-1, which this week claimed there were 96,000 new cases per day by October 25, putting the current outbreak on par with levels seen in the first wave. 

However yesterday, other researchers at King's College London, predicted England has around 32,000 new symptomatic cases per day and claimed infections are rising 'steadily' and 'have not spiralled out of control'.  

The competing projections have led to confusion over how bad the current rate of coronavirus infections is. Professor Tim Spector, the epidemiologist behind the King's study, said the spread of Covid-19 currently appears 'steady' and may even be slowing in Scotland. The team estimated that Britain's cases are doubling once a month.

SAGE released a document from October 14 that show the group warned two weeks ago that the virus was spreading faster than their 'worst case scenario' and there were up to 75,000 new infections per day

SAGE released a document from October 14 that show the group warned two weeks ago that the virus was spreading faster than their 'worst case scenario' and there were up to 75,000 new infections per day

The worrying figures from SAGE are behind Prime Minister Boris Johnson's expected decision to announce a new national lockdown next week after his scientific advisers told him it was the only way to save Christmas..

SAGE - the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, which is made up of senior scientists and disease experts -presented their analysis to the Government on October 14. 

They warned: 'In England, we are breaching the number of infections and hospital admissions in the Reasonable Worst Case planning scenario that is based on COVID-S's winter planning strategy. 

'The number of daily deaths is now in line with the levels in the Reasonable Worst Case and is almost certain to exceed this within the next two weeks.'

They added: 'There is complete consensus in SPI-M-O that the current outlook for the epidemic's trajectory is concerning, if there are no widespread decisive interventions or behavioural changes in the near term.'   

The SAGE scientists did say that if the number of new infections were to fall in the 'very near future' then the reasonable worst case scenario may 'only continue for three to four weeks.' 

However, they warned that if the 'R' rate were to remain above 1 then the epidemic 'will further diverge from the planning scenario.' 

The Government-funded REACT study at Imperial College London predicted earlier this week that the R rate across all of England had climbed to 1.6 - the highest since the first lockdown.  It added it could be as high as 2.8 in London. 

When the R rate is above 1, an outbreak can grow exponentially. An R of 1.8 would mean on average every 10 people infected will infect 28 other people. 

SAGE's latest official R rate estimates did claim the figure had dropped and estimated it stood between 1.1 and 1.3 both nationally and in London. 

Either way, there appears to be consensus that the infection rate remains above 1.  

SAGE had called for the Government to follow the footsteps of Germany and France by retreating back into a full national shutdown 'for at least a month' because they said the three-tiered system was failing. 

 

Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds unite for first joint TV appearance as they praise 'utterly brilliant' NHS staff for saving his life and the maternity team that delivered son Wilfred

Boris Johnson and his fiancée Carrie Symonds will praise NHS medics for delivering their son Wilfred and for saving the Prime Minister's life as he fought coronavirus.

In their first joint television appearance, a recording for the Pride of Britain awards, they will thank frontline workers for their 'courage and dedication' during the pandemic in a broadcast on Sunday.

The couple nominated nurses Jenny McGee and Luis Pitarma, two nurses who cared for Mr Johnson at St Thomas' Hospital in April, and the maternity team who delivered Wilfred later the same month. 

Ms Symonds' £30,000 emerald engagement ring matches her green dress in the broadcast filmed at Chequers earlier this week. 

Ms Symonds says in the video: 'You continue to provide care for all of us in the very toughest of times and it's because of you that not only is Boris still here, but that we are proud parents to our sweet baby boy.

'As a family we have so much to be thankful to the NHS for and we will never stop being grateful.'

The Prime Minister then adds: 'Exactly right. So I want to pay thanks to the utterly brilliant team at St Thomas' Hospital who saved my life.

'There were many of them, but I want to nominate two nurses in particular, Luis and Jenny.' 

Mr Johnson was treated in intensive care for Covid-19 in the London hospital, before the couple's first child together was born at University College Hospital weeks later.

On March 27, he announced he had tested positive for the virus, but he continues to work from home, chairing cabinet meetings and issuing social media releases.

In a video message on Twitter, he said: 'I'm working from home and self-isolating and that's entirely the right thing to do.

'But, be in no doubt that I can continue thanks to the wizardry of modern technology to communicate with all my top team to lead the national fightback against coronavirus.'

Health Secretary Matt Hancock also announced he had tested positive for Covid-19, while chief medical officer Chris Whitty said he had symptoms of the disease and was self-isolating.

Some questioned why the PM had adopted a business-as-usual approach to governing after putting the rest of the UK on lockdown, with Mr Johnson accused of not following his own advice.

The House of Commons continued to sit, with Cabinet meetings and daily press briefings held in person throughout the first weeks of March. 

Mr Johnson was seen in person on April 2, after stepped outside No.11 Downing Street to clap for carers. 

He told those gathered outside: 'I am not allowed out really, I am just standing here.' 

The next day he issued a plea for people to stay at home and save lives, as he was still suffering from a temperature.

He urged people not to break social distancing rules as the weather warmed up, even if they were going 'a bit stir crazy'. 

On April 4, then-pregnant Carrie Symonds, 32, said she was 'on the mend' after suffering coronavirus symptoms herself.

Shortly after the PM's announcement on March 27, Ms Symonds - who usually lives with him in the No.11 flat - shared a photograph of herself self-isolating in Camberwell, south London, with the couple's dog Dilyn.

Just days later on April 5 Mr Johnson was admitted to hospital for tests. 

On April 6 Mr Johnson tweeted: 'Last night, on the advice of my doctor, I went into hospital for some routine tests as I'm still experiencing coronavirus symptoms. I'm in good spirits and keeping in touch with my team, as we work together to fight this virus and keep everyone safe.

'I'd like to say thank you to all the brilliant NHS staff taking care of me and others in this difficult time. You are the best of Britain.

'Stay safe everyone, and please remember to stay at home to protect the NHS and save lives.'

Just hours later, Downing Street said the Prime Minister's condition had worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he had been moved to the hospital's intensive care unit. 

On April 7 Downing Street said the PM's condition remained 'stable' and he was in 'good spirits' following his first night in intensive care, but he would need to remain there for 'close monitoring'. 

The next day the Prime Minister was said to be 'responding to treatment' after a second night in intensive care.

Downing Street said he remained in a stable condition.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak later told the daily coronavirus press briefing that Mr Johnson was still in intensive care, but had been sitting up in bed and engaging with his clinical team.  

On April 9, the Prime Minister was moved out of intensive care and went into a normal ward.

He was discharged two days later on April 11 and thanked NHS staff for saving his life in a video recorded from Downing Street before heading to Chequers with his then-pregnant fiancée Carrie Symonds.

He returned to Number 10 on April 26 and Ms Symonds gave birth in London on April 30, with the Prime Minister at her side. 

In a heart-warming Instagram post revealing the boy's name, Ms Symonds revealed that the middle name Nicholas was a tribute to two NHS doctors, Dr Nick Price and Professor Nick Hart, who  'saved Boris' life.'.....




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