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Coronavirus in UK

Sky News understands the Government will announce today people who test positive on lateral flow tests will not need to get a confirmatory PCR test - they will still need to isolate for at least seven days and to register their positive lateral flow test.
 
Deaths per day is back in double figures. If this continues, 2023 will be equivalent to a bad year of the flu.

Have we got the monster under control at last?
 
Can someone clarify a question i asked in another thread, it may have already been answered before on here so my apologies but why does the hospitality and events sector ask for either a negative test result or proof of vaccine when admitting people into concerts football games etc. If vaccinated people can spread the virus just as bad as non vaccinated surely everyone should be asked for a negative test regardless of vaccine status?
 
Pre-departure tests scrapped - PM

The PM confirms that pre-departure travel Covid tests to enter England from overseas will be scrapped from 04:00 on Friday.

He also says he is lifting the requirement to self-isolate on arrival in England until receiving a negative PCR test result.

Instead people can take a lateral flow test on day two - and if it's positive a further PCR test will be needed to identify any new variants, plus isolation as normal.
 
UK records 194,747 cases and 334 deaths

The UK has recorded 194,747 new daily coronavirus cases and a further 334 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, the government's dashboard shows.

A message on the dashboard says today's death figures include a backlog of hospital deaths reported overnight by NHS England covering the period 1 - 4 January.
 
Coronavirus: Estimated 1.3 million people in UK suffering from long COVID, ONS figures show

An estimated 1.3 million people living in the UK are suffering from self-reported long COVID, data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows.

The figures, valid from 9 November to 6 December, represents around 2% of the population.

According to the ONS, prevalence of self-reported long COVID remained greatest in those who were:

Aged 35 to 69 years
Female
Living in more deprived areas
Working in health, social care or teaching and education
With another activity-limiting health condition or disability
And, 64% of people with self-reported long COVID said their symptoms affected their daily activities, while 20% said it limited their daily activities "a lot", the ONS said.

Long COVID symptoms vary from person to person, but many who experience them do not require hospital treatment.

Some studies have found 10% of people who have mild COVID-19 will go on to have long COVID, but other studies have estimated as many as 35% will.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...ing-from-long-covid-ons-figures-show-12510052
 
COVID-19: UK tops 150,000 coronavirus-related deaths since start of pandemic after recorded 313 in last 24 hours

The UK has recorded more than 150,000 COVID-related deaths since the start of the pandemic after the latest daily figures showed 313 further fatalities.

It brings the total number of deaths reported within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test to 150,057.

A further 146,390 COVID cases have also been reported, according to the latest government data, taking the total number since the beginning of the pandemic to 14,333,794.

Commenting on the number of COVID-related deaths passing 150,000, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the virus has "taken a terrible toll on our country".

"Each and every one of those is a profound loss to the families, friends, and communities and my thoughts and condolences are with them," he added.

He then went on to urge people to get vaccinated, saying: "Our way out of this pandemic is for everyone to get their booster or their first or second dose if they haven't yet.

"I want to thank everyone in the NHS and all the volunteers who have come forward to help with our country's vaccine programme."

Meanwhile, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer described the figure as a "dark milestone" for the UK.

"Our thoughts are with all those who have lost someone and we thank everyone for supporting the vaccination effort," he said, before calling for a public inquiry to take place to "provide answers" and ensure "lessons are learned".

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19...-after-recorded-313-in-last-24-hours-12511664
 
<b>BBC — Covid: Hospital boss admits they may lose staff over compulsory vaccines.</b>

The boss of one of London's busiest hospitals has said he is worried about losing staff when new rules come in requiring them to be vaccinated.

From April, front-line NHS staff in England will need to have the Covid jab - or will be moved to another role.

King's College Hospital chief Clive Kay said his job was to encourage workers to get jabbed - and 10% of his 14,000 staff were still unvaccinated.

The government's Nadhim Zahawi defended the policy as "the right thing" to do.

From the start of April, under law NHS staff in England who have direct face-to-face contact with patients will need to have been vaccinated against Covid.

A similar policy has already been brought in for staff working in social care in England - with care homes warning it has worsened the staffing crisis.

The NHS is already facing a severe lack of staff and is short of about 93,000 workers.

Mr Kay was speaking after one of his own doctors challenged Health Secretary Sajid Javid over the issue, saying he was "not happy" that he faced being dismissed for not getting the jab.

The doctor, Steve James, an ICU consultant, argued that he believed he already had antibodies after catching Covid - and has since told the BBC he believes vaccination should be a matter of personal choice.

Hospital boss Mr Kay refused to say whether he thought the new rule was fair - although argued that staff were "not being forced" to have the jab, but instead "being encouraged".

But pressed on the rules, he acknowledged it could mean people leaving their current job: "There's a possibility if they choose not to be vaccinated they could be redeployed. And if we can't find that opportunity to redeploy them then the consequence is that they will [not have a job]."

"We will not make individuals be vaccinated," Mr Kay told the BBC's Sophie Raworth on the Sunday Morning programme. "We must treat them with kindness, with compassion, we must give them every single opportunity to talk through if they don't want the vaccine... but ultimately it is their choice."

Asked how many front-line staff he could lose under the law change, Mr Kay said: "I am confident that we are already seeing a number of staff choosing to be vaccinated. I don't want at this stage to predict or give any numbers."

But he said he was "of course" worried about staffing, adding: "My job is to worry about everything in relation to whether or not we have enough staff here to provide care for patients safely."

According to Mr Javid in November, more than 93% of NHS frontline staff had had their first dose and 90% were fully vaccinated. This is higher than the wider population, where 90% have had a first dose and 83% have had both.

Speaking to the BBC's Sophie Raworth on Sunday morning, Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi defended mandatory vaccines for NHS staff in England, saying: "We have a duty of care when looking after the most vulnerable to protect ourselves and to protect them."

Dr James told the BBC's Broadcasting House programme on Sunday: "My view is that we should not mandate vaccination."

"Normally you go through this process of informed consent, where you weigh up as a doctor with the patient, the risks the benefits and that person's personal preference."

He said he has been written to by "hundreds of people" since he spoke to Mr Javid, who have told him they were thankful that he has spoken up about how he felt.

"I've been written to by a group of midwives who say that, I think 41 or 45 of them in that unit will all not be vaccinated. That means the entire midwife staff from one hospital are going to leave."

Each of the four UK nations makes its own decisions on the issue.

Scotland and Wales have not made any proposals to make Covid jabs compulsory for NHS workers or care home staff, while in Northern Ireland there is to be a public consultation.

Scotland's Health Secretary Humza Yousaf said they were not going down the same route as England "partly because the uptake from NHS and social care staff is so incredibly high". "I don't think making vaccines mandatory is the way to go," he said.

— — —
 
UK reports 142,224 daily cases and 77 deaths

The UK has reported 142,224 daily cases and 77 deaths in the latest 24-hour period.

This compares with 141,472 cases and 97 deaths yesterday.

Another 141,495 people have received their booster jab, taking the total to 35,664,164.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-59953823

<b>Fans to return to Scottish stadiums next week</b>

Restrictions on large outdoor events in Scotland, including football matches and concerts, are to be lifted from next Monday

The move will allow fans to return to stadiums when the Scottish Premiership's winter break ends.

It will also avoid Scotland's Six Nations rugby matches having to be played behind closed doors at Murrayfield.

A limit of 500 people at outdoor events has been in place since Boxing Day.

Premiership football teams started their winter break early after the crowd limit was imposed, with many fans believing the sport was unfairly singled out by the restrictions.

Large Hogmanay events, including the famous street party in Edinburgh, were also cancelled.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament that the limit of 500 people would be removed from Monday 17 January - which will allow Celtic's match with Hibernian on that day to be played before a full crowd at Celtic Park.

But restrictions on indoor events and venues will remain in place until 24 January, when Ms Sturgeon said she hoped to be able to lift them too.

The measures were imposed by the Scottish government in an attempt to slow the spread of the Omicron variant.

Limits of 100 people were placed on indoor standing events or 200 if they were seated, while nightclubs had to close and pubs and restaurants had to bring back table service for alcohol and a one-metre distance between different groups of people.

People were also urged not to meet in groups of more than three households.

But the latest Scottish government Covid report showed that average daily cases in Scotland (2,824 per one million population in the week to 6 January) were higher than in England (2,615 per one million), which has fewer Covid restrictions.

Some business leaders said that the tougher coronavirus rules had failed to make a "meaningful difference" to infection levels and were causing "enormous damage" to some sectors.

And pressure has been growing on the first minister to set out how Scotland can begin to "live safely" with Covid and loosen restrictions.

Ms Sturgeon insisted that the restrictions had "helped to mitigate to some extent the impact of the Omicron wave", with about 30,000 positive cases a day rather than the initial projection of 50,000 per day.

She added: "It is very likely that the situation we face now, though serious, would have been even more challenging without the renewed sacrifices made by people across the country over these last few weeks."

— — —

That was quick. Pointless doing it in the first place really. New Year’s Eve north of the border ruined, for what?
 
The UK has recorded 398 further coronavirus-related deaths - the second day in a row that the daily figure has hit an 11-month high, according to government data.

Wednesday's number is the highest since 24 February 2021, when 442 deaths were reported within 28 days of a positive test.

It brings the total number of deaths to 151,007, although separate figures published by the Office for National Statistics show there have now been 176,000 deaths registered in the UK where COVID-19 was mentioned on the death certificate.
 
Health Secretary Sajid Javid has announced the reduction of the self-isolation period after a positive COVID test in England from seven to five days for fully vaccinated people
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-59973659

<b>Covid in the UK: Reported cases at lowest level for a month</b>

The UK has reported another 81,713 coronavirus cases, the lowest daily level seen since 15 December.

The apparent ebbing of the Omicron wave comes as some experts claim the end of the pandemic is in sight for the UK.

However, the number of deaths within 28 days of a test remains high, with 1,843 over the past seven days - a 45% rise from the previous week.

The number of hospital patients with Covid has dropped - though the most recent figures date from Monday.

The 15,698 admitted in the seven days to 10 January represented a slight week-on-week fall.

Prof Julian Hiscox, chairman in infection and global health at the University of Liverpool, told the BBC that we are heading towards a new phase of the pandemic where the virus has a lesser impact on daily life.

"We're almost there, it is now the beginning of the end, at least in the UK. I think life in 2022 will be almost back to before the pandemic," he said.

Reported infections have been falling steadily since the new year. However, confirmed cases are still significantly higher than the peaks of previous waves during the pandemic, following the arrival in November of the highly transmissible Omicron variant.

And data released on Friday from the ONS said that, in the week ending 6 January, one in 15 people in England had Covid, with one in 20 infected in the rest of the UK.

From this week, people without symptoms in England no longer need a lab-processed PCR test to confirm a positive lateral flow. People are still asked to report the results of their lateral flow tests.

There were 287 deaths within 28 days of a positive test reported on Saturday. The lag between infection and death may partly explain why deaths remain high despite the fall in cases.

But with a smaller proportion of Covid cases resulting in death, the signs suggest the virus is becoming less deadly as our bodies become more familiar with fighting it, through vaccination and previous infection.

As cases continue to fall, Wales and Scotland have begun loosening tighter restrictions imposed around Christmas when the nations saw cases surge.

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced the attendance limit on outdoor events will be lifted from Monday.

The Covid certification scheme will remain in place, and anyone who had their second dose more than four months ago must also have received a booster to be considered fully vaccinated.

In Wales, the number of people allowed at outdoor events has risen from 50 to 500 - and from 21 January limits will be lifted altogether, allowing crowds to return to sporting events, including Six Nations rugby games in Cardiff.

The country's nightclubs will reopen from 28 January, and gatherings in pubs and restaurants will no longer be limited to six people.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60047438

<b>Covid: Face mask rules and Covid passes to end in England</b>

England's Plan B measures are to end from next Thursday, with advice to work from home and Covid passports both dropped, Boris Johnson has announced.

Face coverings will no longer be mandatory - with the requirement dropped for secondary pupils in classrooms from tomorrow.

Mr Johnson said England was reverting to "Plan A" due to boosters and how people had followed Plan B measures.

He told MPs that scientists believed the Omicron wave had peaked nationally.

In a statement to MPs in the House of Commons, the prime minister confirmed mandatory Covid passports for entering nightclubs and large events will end, though organisations can choose to use the NHS Covid pass if they wish.

And face masks will no longer be mandated, though people are still advised to wear coverings in enclosed or crowded spaces, particularly when meeting strangers.

From Thursday, secondary school pupils will no longer have to wear face masks in classrooms and the Department of Education will remove guidance on their use in communal areas "shortly", the PM added.

The prime minister also said the government intended to end the legal requirement for people to self-isolate after they test positive for Covid.

He said while self-isolation regulations remain in place for now, as Covid becomes endemic they would need to be replaced with advice and guidance.

When the current self-isolation regulations expire on 24 March, Mr Johnson said he expected not to renew them. If the data allows, the government will "seek a vote in this House to bring that date forward", the PM added.

The restrictions were first introduced in December in a bid to contain the highly-transmissible Omicron variant and allow time for the booster vaccine rollout.

UK Daily infections remain high but are falling, with the total recorded over the past seven days down 38.9% on the previous week.

The latest infection survey by the Office for National Statistics estimates that just under 3.5 million people in the UK would test positive for Covid in the week ending 15 January - down from 4.3 million last week.

This equates to around one in 20 people in England, one in 20 in Scotland and one in 25 in Wales. The figure was also one in 20 in in Northern Ireland, but the ONS described the trend as "uncertain".

The number of Covid-related hospital admissions also appears to be decreasing, with the weekly figure down 2.9% in the seven days up to 14 January.

However, there is a lag between people catching the virus and becoming seriously ill so deaths are continuing to rise - and are up 14.7% on last week.

On Tuesday, the UK recorded 94,432 new cases and 438 deaths within 28 days of a positive test - the highest figure since 24 February - although the daily death figure tends to be higher after weekends because of reporting delays.

More than 36 million boosters have been given across the UK so far, with the government continuing to urge anyone who hasn't received their jabs to come forward.

The UK's devolved nations set their own Covid restrictions and have moved at different speeds in introducing and easing them throughout the pandemic.

In Scotland, most remaining restrictions will be lifted from Monday, including allowing nightclubs to reopen and removing limits on indoor events.

In Wales, crowds will return to sporting events from Friday and nightclubs can reopen the following week. In Northern Ireland, nightclubs remain closed and indoor standing events are not allowed.

Meanwhile, the prime minister continues to face growing pressure over parties held at Downing Street during lockdown.

On Wednesday lunchtime it emerged that Bury South MP Christian Wakeford had defected to Labour and called on Mr Johnson to quit as prime minister.

He was among the MPs to have written a letter of no confidence in the prime minister to Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench Conservatives.

Mr Johnson has denied that he was warned a drinks party in May 2020 risked breaking lockdown rules and has insisted he believed it to be a work event.

But his former aide Dominic Cummings has accused Mr Johnson of misleading MPs, claiming he had waved aside warnings about plans for a party.

If 54 Tory MPs send letters to Sir Graham expressing no confidence in the prime minister, it will trigger a leadership contest.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-60109945

<b>Covid travel tests to be axed in England for double vaccinated</b>

People arriving in England from abroad will no longer have to take Covid tests if they have been fully vaccinated, the prime minister has confirmed.

Boris Johnson said the further relaxation of the travel rules was designed to show that the country was open to travellers and business.

He did not confirm when the rules would go but the transport secretary is set to make a statement later on Monday.

Vaccinated travellers currently need to do a test within two days of arriving.

Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have previously followed England's lead, but any changes are for them to decide.

Mr Johnson said although people had to be "cautious", "you can see the figures are starting to get better".

"What we're doing on travel, to show that this country is open for business, open for travellers, you will see changes so that people arriving no longer have to take tests if they have been vaccinated, if they have been double vaccinated," he added.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is expected to make a statement in the House of Commons outlining the rule changes.

The move will be welcomed by the travel and tourism industry, one of the sectors most badly affected by coronavirus lockdown measures.

Research published last week by trade body Airlines UK and Manchester Airports Group said there was scientific evidence for making testing rules a "thing of the past" for fully-vaccinated travellers.

Commenting on the changes, Airlines UK's chief executive Tim Alderslade said: "This is a landmark day for passengers, businesses and UK plc."

He added: "With the all-important half-term week approaching, passengers should now get booking."

Johan Lundgren, chief executive of easyJet said the airline would "now look ahead to what we believe will be a strong summer".

He said: "It is clear travel restrictions did not materially slow the spread of Omicron in the UK and so it is important that there are no more knee jerk reactions to future variants."

Mr Lundgren said the airline planned to return to "near 2019 levels" of flying this summer.

Virgin Atlantic said: "The removal of all testing for vaccinated passengers is the final step in moving towards frictionless air travel, allowing passengers to reconnect with loved ones and business colleagues.

"It restores customer confidence and demand will be boosted in a critical booking window for the travel industry."

At the weekend, one of the big testing firms said Covid tests for travellers arriving in the UK should be scrapped. Simon Worrell, global medical director of Collinson - which also runs airport lounges - said: "As soon as we can drop it, we will be delighted."

And earlier this month, the boss of Heathrow Airport, John Holland-Kaye, said the aviation industry will only fully recover when all restrictions are lifted.

Currently, fully vaccinated passengers, who have had two doses, and under-18s no longer need a pre-departure test two days before travelling to the UK.

However, within 48 hours of arrival, everyone aged five and over - or 11 and over in Scotland - must take a lateral flow test (LFT), or a more expensive PCR test.

If they take an LFT and it is positive, they must self-isolate and take an NHS PCR test to confirm the result.

Vaccinated travellers also have to fill in and submit an online passenger locator form no more than 48 hours before arriving, even if they are just passing through the UK.

Earlier in January, the government scrapped the need for fully vaccinated travellers coming to England to take a Covid test before they travel.

Arrivals who are not fully vaccinated must take a pre-departure test and two post-arrival PCR tests, which are more expensive than the lateral flow version.

They must also self-isolate for 10 days.

Mr Worrell said: "Airport testing was only ever supposed to be a band-aid, a temporary solution to get trade and tourism staggering whilst we build up immunity and we are able to fight the virus by ourselves. We are at that point now.

"The link between getting infected and hospitalisation has been broken. We are in a fantastic place - the envy of the world, I think."

Mr Johnson said last Wednesday the government was reviewing testing arrangements for travel.

However, virologists have expressed caution.

Dr Stephen Griffin, from the University of Leeds, told the BBC last week: "You have a moral responsibility to monitor and to know if you're infectious. It is a good idea to test."
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-60137428

<b>Sainsbury's asks shoppers and staff to keep wearing masks</b>

Sainsbury's has said it will continue asking customers and staff in England to wear masks in its shops when Plan B rules end on Thursday.

The supermarket chain said safety remained its "highest priority".

The legal requirement for face coverings in public places and Covid passports will be dropped after infections peaked nationally.

The government has advised people to still wear masks in enclosed or crowded spaces and when meeting strangers.

The BBC has contacted other big supermarkets to ask if they also plan to keep the policy.

Morrisons said it would continue to follow the latest government guidance, so will not take the same stance as Sainsbury's.

In a statement to the BBC, Sainsbury's said it would ask customers and staff in England to "continue to wear a face covering in our stores if they are able to".

"In Scotland and Wales face coverings remain mandatory for those who can wear them in our stores, in line with the latest government restrictions," the supermarket added.

"We continue to have a range of safety measures in all of our stores, including screens and sanitising stations."

When the previous mask-wearing mandate ended in July last year, Sainsbury's and its rival Tesco both asked shoppers to continue wearing face coverings.

At the time, Sainsbury's said its strategy reflected feedback from customers and colleagues, the majority of whom supported keeping the policy in place.

When the government re-imposed a mask mandate in November to battle Omicron, unions warned that shop workers had no power to make customers wear them.

Those who tried were also sometimes subject to abuse, with the shop workers' union Usdaw warning that it attracted "so much aggression" from a minority of customers.

Scientific evidence has suggested coronavirus transmission mainly happens indoors where people are closer together.

Covering the nose and mouth can help reduce the spread of virus droplets from coughs, sneezes and while speaking.

The main purpose is to protect others although there is some evidence masks offer protection to wearers.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-60249904

<b>Improving cancer care a huge challenge post-pandemic</b>

Improving cancer care will be a huge challenge, ministers are being warned as they promise a new 10-year strategy for England.

Figures suggest there have been 34,000 fewer diagnoses since Covid hit - 50,000 if you include the whole UK.

It risks an increasing number of late diagnoses which reduces the chances of survival, cancer charities said.

It comes as the government is promising to invest in new technologies and equipment to spot cancer quicker.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the new "war on cancer" strategy will be published later this year.

"It will take a far-reaching look at how we want cancer care to be in 2032. Looking at all stages from prevention, to diagnosis, treatment and vaccines," he said.

Mr Javid pointed out the NHS was already taking steps, including evaluating new blood tests to spot cancers early and opening a network of testing centres.

The last cancer strategy was only published in 2019 as part of the NHS Long-Term Plan, promising three-quarters of cancers would be spotted at an early stage by 2028.

Before the pandemic, just over half of cancers were spotted at stages one or two, which is classed as early.

But the fear is the drop in diagnoses, which has been caused by people either not coming forward for check-ups or struggling to get access care especially in the early months of the pandemic, will lead to those figures getting worse rather than better in the short-term.

Lynda Thomas, of Macmillan Cancer Support, said given the impact of the pandemic people with cancer needed "support more than ever".

"We have been sounding the alarm for a long time," she added.

But she said while improving diagnosis and treatment was crucial, it was like "building sandcastles while the tide comes" without extra staff to tackle the backlogs and demand for care.

Anna Jewell, chair of the Less Survivable Cancers Taskforce, said there were particular problems with cancers of the lung, liver, brain, oesophagus, pancreas and stomach, which have the lowest survival rates.

Just 16% of people diagnosed with these cancers survive for five years.

"The situation is urgent. If we are to truly be successful we need to go much further on cancer and improve the persistently poor outcomes that patients in this country have long experienced compared to other countries."
 
The UK has reported 54,095 new cases of COVID-19 on Sunday, as well as a further 75 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to the latest government figures.

It follows 60,578 new cases and a further 259 deaths reported on Saturday, and 69,007 new cases and 91 deaths reported last Sunday.
 
Boris Johnson announces an end to all Covid restrictions in England, saying the UK will now rely on vaccines and treatments.

From Thursday, people with a positive test will no longer need to self-isolate and routine contact tracing will end.

Free testing will end from April 1 for the general public, including those with symptoms.

But elderly people will get free tests if they are symptomatic, Johnson says.

Special payments available to those forced to self-isolate will also come to an end.
 
People with Covid in England are no longer legally required to self-isolate, although it is still recommended.

All legal Covid restrictions in England have now ended under the government's new "Living with Covid" plan.
 
A cinema owner who admitted breaching Covid rules has been warned her fine could increase massively.

Cinema & Co owner Anna Redfern, 46, was given a suspended prison sentence and fined £15,000 in December at Swansea Magistrates' Court for defying laws.

Judge Paul Thomas QC told Swansea Crown Court the £50,000 she crowdfunded could "form part of her means for the assessment of a fine".

Redfern's appeal against this will take place on 13 May.

In November, Covid passes became a legal requirement in cinemas in Wales, but Redfern refused to enforce them, saying they were "an infringement on our human rights".

On Friday, the court heard how Redfern is appealing against the £15,000 fine, on behalf of her company and in a personal capacity.

The judge asked about the sum of "north of £50,000" received by Redfern through an "online crowd funder".

The court had heard previously that the "aims" of this fundraiser were to pay for legal costs, challenge fines and loss of business, as well five other charitable aims.

He added that the businesswoman may have her fine reduced if the appeal is successful but may have it "dramatically increased and be ordered to pay a substantial amount of costs" should her appeal be unsuccessful.

Ms Redfern's barrister, Graham Goodwill, told the judge that she is "aware of the risks".
 
<b>Covid infections rising again across UK - ONS</b>

Covid infections are increasing across the UK with about one in 25 people infected, according to the latest estimates from the Office for National Statistics.

In Scotland, 300,000 people - one in 18 - have coronavirus - the highest level recorded during the pandemic.

A sub-variant of Omicron, called BA.2, is now thought to be the most common strain in most of the UK.

The ONS says it's too early to say what's behind the rise in cases.

But some scientists believe the BA.2 variant's increased transmissibility, recent easing of restrictions and waning immunity from the vaccines could all be factors.

The ONS infection survey, which tests thousands of people randomly in households across the UK, estimates that 2.6 million people would have tested positive in the week ending 5 March - up from 2.4 million the previous week.

See: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-60709712
 
<b>UK: Covid inquiry's public hearings to begin in 2023</b>

The inquiry into the UK government's handling of the coronavirus pandemic will not hold public hearings until 2023, its chair has said.

Baroness Hallett said her team would gather evidence throughout this year and she would try to deliver recommendations "as soon as possible".

The draft terms of reference for the inquiry were published on Thursday.

More than 162,000 people have died within 28 days of a positive Covid case across the UK since the pandemic began.

The inquiry, which is due to begin in the spring, will look at preparedness for the pandemic, as well as the health, care and economic response.

In an open letter Baroness Hallett, a former High Court judge, said that once it had officially begun there would be a chance for people to share their experiences of the pandemic.

She said: "I will do everything in my power to deliver recommendations as soon as possible, to ensure that in any future pandemic, the suffering and hardship many of you have experienced is reduced or prevented."

Baroness Hallett has launched a consultation on the draft terms of reference of the inquiry, running until 7 April, which will set out the scope of its investigation.

She said her team would be visiting towns and cities across the four nations of the UK to gather the views of bereaved families, community and support groups.

Baroness Hallett pledged to run "an independent, thorough and open inquiry" and said that the pandemic had had an "unprecedented impact on everyone" in the UK.

Under the current draft terms of reference, the inquiry aims to produce "a factual, narrative account" covering decision-making at all levels of government and the response of the health and care sector as well as identifying the "lessons to be learned".

The Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group welcomed the publication of the terms of reference as a "huge step forward" and said it looked forward to contributing to the consultation on the terms.

The Scottish government has its own Covid-19 inquiry, to be led by Judge Lady Poole, but Northern Ireland is not holding its own at this stage.

Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford has resisted calls to hold a Wales-specific inquiry and has encouraged people to contribute to the consultation on the UK inquiry.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60712870
 
'Deltacron' identified as new COVID variant - how fast is it spreading and should we be worried?


"Deltacron" has been officially identified as a COVID-19 variant, with confirmed cases in France and the US.

Combining mutations from both Omicron and Delta, concerns were raised earlier this year following investigations by a lab in Cyprus.

Now, virologists from L'Institut Pasteur in Paris have sequenced the genome of a genuine "Deltacron" variant.


Cases have been confirmed in several regions of France and it appears to have been circulating since early January.

In a briefing on 9 March, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said the strain had also been found in the Netherlands and Denmark.

There are two confirmed cases in the US with a number of other suspected infections.

And last month, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) revealed one case of Delta x Omicron had been discovered in a person who had contracted both variants.


Scientists says the variant's "backbone" is derived from Delta while its spike - the part of the virus that attaches itself to human cells - is from Omicron.

Combined viruses come about when someone is infected with two variants at the same time, and their cells then replicate together.


Maria van Kerkhove, the COVID technical lead for the WHO, said this mutation was "to be expected, especially with intense circulation of Omicron & Delta".

She added that her team was "tracking and discussing" the variant.

Is 'Deltacron' in the UK?

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) revealed one case of Delta x Omicron had been discovered in the UK, which developed in a person who had contracted both variants.

Reports suggest it is only a matter of time before more cases are confirmed.


Should we be worried?

The Delta variant had more severe effects on those who caught it, while Omicron was more infectious. This may cause concern over a strain combined from both.

However, scientists stress there is now substantial immunity in the human population against both variants and there is no reason to think this will pose a danger to vaccines.

Dr William Lee, chief science officer at Helix, a California based lab that sequences COVID-19 samples for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told USA Today: "The fact that there is not that much of it, that even the two cases we saw were different, suggests that it's probably not going to elevate to a variant of concern level."


And Dr Van Kerkhove added in the places where "Deltacron" has been found, "there are very low levels of this detection".

She also confirmed they had not seen "any change in severity", and that studies will continue to track its effects.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said there were "no concerns at all" when asked about the Deltacron variant.

"There are variants that we would obviously keep under review," he said.

"The most recent one of concern has been Omicron but we have successfully navigated our way through that as a country thanks to the response of the British people.

"There are also so-called subvariants of Omicron and we're not concerned about any of those at this important time.

"We keep it under review but we have no concerns at all."

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19...t-spreading-and-should-we-be-worried-12563165
 
Rules on free lateral flow and PCR Covid tests published

Free Covid tests will still be available for some groups, including NHS staff caring directly for patients, the government has confirmed as it winds down the service for the public.

From 1 April, most people will have to pay for a lateral flow test in England.

It is part of the government's 'living with Covid' plan, although levels of the virus are high, with an estimated one in 16 people infected in the UK.

Some free testing will continue during April in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

In Wales the cut-off is July.

The general public has been discouraged from stockpiling test packs ahead of the change, but since ministers announced the end of the free testing programme for most of the population it has been difficult for many to access them.

The government says the end of universal free testing is possible because vaccines, along with antiviral drugs, are doing a good job of protecting people against severe Covid.

Although infections and hospitalisations with the virus have been rising in recent weeks, more than half of the patients in hospital who test positive are there for something else, rather than Covid.

Testing can be ramped up again should it be needed, such as if a new variant of concern emerges, the government says.

The new rules say that from 1 April in England, free testing will be provided for:

Patients in hospital, where a PCR test is required for their care

People who are eligible for community Covid drug treatments because they are at higher risk of getting seriously ill if they become infected. People in this group will be contacted directly and sent lateral flow tests to keep at home for use if they have symptoms, as well as being told how to reorder tests
Care home residents

People working in some high-risk settings, including care homes and prisons. These staff will be able to test regularly, without symptoms

People will also be tested before being discharged from hospital into care homes, hospices and refuges.

But most visitors to adult social care settings, and visitors to the NHS, prisons or places of detention will not be required to take a test.

Anyone who tests positive - whether they paid for a test or it was free - will be advised to try to stay at home and avoid contact with other people for five days, which is when they are most infectious.

Children and young people who are unwell and have a high temperature should stay at home. They can go back to nursery, school or college when they feel well enough and the fever has gone.

Dame Jenny Harries, Chief Executive of the UK Health Security Agency, said: "As we learn to live with Covid, we are focusing our testing provision on those at higher risk of serious outcomes from the virus, while encouraging people to keep following simple steps to help keep themselves and others safe.

"The pandemic is not over and how the virus will develop over time remains uncertain.

"Covid still poses a real risk to many of us, particularly with case rates and hospitalisations on the rise.

"That is why it is sensible to wear a mask in enclosed spaces, keep indoor spaces ventilated and stay away from others if you have any symptoms of a respiratory illness, including Covid."

The government also confirmed some other changes from 1 April:

free parking for NHS staff introduced during the pandemic will end
visiting restrictions in care homes with outbreaks will be reduced from 14 to 10 days

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-60911771
 
The official list of COVID-19 symptoms has been expanded to include nine new signs of the disease including headaches, diarrhoea and a blocked nose.

The list has been updated as COVID infection levels hit a record high in the UK, with almost five million people estimated to be currently infected.

Professor Tim Spector, lead scientist of the Zoe COVID-19 symptom tracker app, has said updating the symptoms list is overdue and could help reduce infections.

The extension comes just days after the government ended the offer of free universal COVID-19 tests.

The new symptoms have been added to the NHS website, alongside the three traditional symptoms of a fever, a new and persistent cough, and a loss or change in taste or smell.

According to the NHS the signs of COVID-19 that people should look out for also include:

shortness of breath;
feeling tired or exhausted;
an aching body;
a headache;
a sore throat;
a blocked or runny nose;
loss of appetite;
diarrhoea;
feeling sick or being sick.

A note on the NHS website adds: "The symptoms are very similar to symptoms of other illnesses, such as colds and flu."

Both the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the US have had longer symptom lists for some time.

But in the UK the NHS list had just three symptoms for almost two years.

COVID latest: England opens up jabs to kids as young as five - follow live coronavirus updates

It is understood that the government's chief medical officer, Professor Chris Whitty, would have needed to sign off on the expanded list of symptoms.

It comes as the majority of people now have to pay if they want to do a COVID test, with only the most vulnerable able to book a free test.

Under the previous testing regime people would only qualify for PCR tests - those performed in a lab - if they had one of the three main traditional symptoms or if they had been invited to take a test.

Professor Spector tweeted: "NHS official Main symptoms of coronavirus (COVID-19) have finally changed after 2 years of lobbying and Zoe app user input - hurrah! Pity they have the order wrong - but it's a start and could help reduce infections. thanks ZOE loggers!"

In March, Professor Spector was highly critical of the government's "refusal" to recognise a "wider array of symptoms".

He suggested that not acknowledging the wider list of ailments afflicting people with the virus, along with the decision to drop isolation advice and withdraw free testing, could have driven up transmission rates.

On Friday the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said some 4.9 million people in the UK are estimated to have had COVID-19 in the week ending 26 March, up from 4.3 million in the previous week.

The ONS said an estimated one in every 13 people in England had the virus during that week.

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-nine-new-symptoms-added-to-list-as-free-testing-ends-12582079
 
<b>Covid: Discharging untested patients to care homes 'unlawful'</b>

Government policies on discharging untested patients from hospital to care homes in England at the start of the Covid pandemic have been ruled unlawful by the High Court.

The ruling came after two women took Public Health England and the health secretary, then Matt Hancock, to court.

Dr Cathy Gardner and Fay Harris said it had caused a "shocking death toll".

Prime Minister Boris Johnson renewed his apologies for all those who lost loved ones during the pandemic.

When Covid hit in early 2020, patients were rapidly discharged into care homes without testing, despite the risk of asymptomatic transmission, with government documents showing there was no requirement for this until mid-April.

Dr Gardner and Ms Harris said there had been failures in protecting residents and brought the legal challenge.

They partially succeeded in claims against Public Health England and the secretary of state for health and social care.

Speaking outside court, Dr Gardner said she "believed all along that my father and other residents of care homes were neglected and let down by the government".

"The High Court has now vindicated that belief, and our campaign to expose the truth," she said.

In their judgement, Lord Justice Bean and Mr Justice Garnham found the decisions of the then health secretary to make and maintain a series of policies contained in documents issued on 17 and 19 March and 2 April 2020 were unlawful.

They ruled this was on the grounds the drafters of those documents failed to take into account the risk to elderly and vulnerable residents from non-symptomatic transmission, which had been highlighted by Sir Patrick Vallance in a radio interview as early as 13 March.

Sir Patrick told the Today programme that "it's quite likely that there is some degree of asymptomatic transmission".

A barrister representing Dr Gardner, from Sidmouth in Devon, and Ms Harris, from Medstead in Hampshire, told the court at a hearing in March that more than 20,000 elderly or disabled care home residents died from Covid between March and June 2020 in England and Wales.

Jason Coppel QC also said in a written case outline for the judicial review that the care home population was known to be "uniquely vulnerable" to Covid.

"The government's failure to protect it, and positive steps taken by the government which introduced Covid-19 infection into care homes, represent one of the most egregious and devastating policy failures in the modern era," he added.

Dr Gardner's father Michael Gibson was 88 when he died on 3 April 2020 while living in a home in Oxfordshire during the UK's first lockdown.

His cause of death was given as "suspected Covid" after the home took in a patient discharged from a hospital with the virus.

Former Royal Marine Donald Harris, 89, died in Alton, Hampshire, on 1 May 2020 after an outbreak in his care home.

His daughter, Ms Harris, said she was "very pleased" with the judgment and it brought "some comfort".

She said the government's actions "exposed many vulnerable people to a greater risk of death - and many thousands did die".

"It has only increased the distress to me and many others that the government have not been honest and owned up to their mistakes," she added.

Both women also said Mr Johnson should resign in the wake of the ruling.

In their ruling the judges said: "This was not a binary question - a choice between on the one hand doing nothing at all, and on the other hand requiring all newly admitted residents to be quarantined.

"The document could, for example, have said that where an asymptomatic patient, other than one who has tested negative, is admitted to a care home, he or she should, so far as practicable, be kept apart from other residents for up to 14 days.

"Since there is no evidence that this question was considered by the secretary of state, or that he was asked to consider it, it is not an example of a political judgment on a finely balanced issue.

"Nor is it a point on which any of the expert committees had advised that no guidance was required.

"Those drafting the March Discharge Policy and the April Admissions Guidance simply failed to take into account the highly relevant consideration of the risk to elderly and vulnerable residents from asymptomatic transmission."

The judges said these issues were not addressed until a further document was issued in mid-April 2020.

They rejected other claims made under human rights legislation, and against NHS England.

A spokesman for Mr Hancock said the case "comprehensively clears ministers of any wrongdoing and finds Mr Hancock acted reasonably on all counts".

"The court also found that Public Health England failed to tell ministers what they knew about asymptomatic transmission," she said.

"Mr Hancock has frequently stated how he wished this had been brought to his attention earlier."

During Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons earlier, Mr Johnson said:

"Of course I want to renew my apologies and sympathies for all those who lost loved ones during the pandemic, people who lost loved ones in care homes.

"I want to remind the house of what an incredibly difficult time that was and how difficult that decision was. We didn't know very much about the disease.

"The thing that we didn't know in particular... was that Covid could be transmitted asymptomatically in the way that it was. And that was something that I wish we had known more about at the time."

A government spokesperson said they "specifically sought to safeguard care home residents based on the best information at the time".

They added "the vast majority of the judgement found in the government's favour", but the government acknowledged the judges' comments "on assessing the risks of asymptomatic transmission and our guidance on isolation, and [it] will respond in more detail in due course".

Labour's shadow health secretary Wes Streeting claimed "ministers ignored" warnings and "cannot claim to have acted to save lives".

"They broke the law and people died," he said.

"We owe it to bereaved families to make sure that this never happens again."

Helen Wildbore, director of the Relatives and Residents Association, a charity representing older people in care and their families, said older people were "abandoned" at the start of the pandemic.

She said: "The ruling is very welcome as a first step to justice, but bereaved families will be left asking why more wasn't done to protect their loved ones and how many lives could have been saved."

Charlie Williams, whose father died in a care home in April 2020, was told that nobody in the home had coronavirus.

However, he later found out that 27 residents had died from the virus.

Mr Williams, a spokesman for the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group, said:

"We now need to see those responsible for those dark days held accountable and lessons learned to save lives, ensuring the grim scenes of spring 2020 are never repeated again."

A public inquiry to "learn lessons" from the pandemic for the future is due to be begin next year.

Its mandate includes looking at how well prepared the UK was for a pandemic and how the NHS has coped with it.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-61227709
 
Evidence of more rubbish decision making from Matt Hancock and Boris at the start of the pandemic.

A pretty sorry episode.
 
The National Crime Agency has launched a potential fraud investigation into a PPE company linked to Michelle Mone and searched the Tory peer’s shared home.

The NCA investigation is into PPE Medpro, a company that secured more than £200m in government contracts near the start of the pandemic without public tender.

On Wednesday, the agency searched several properties associated with the company in the Isle of Man and London. They included the Isle of Man office building where PPE Medpro is registered and the mansion where Lady Mone lives with her husband, the business magnate Douglas Barrowman.

The Isle of Man constabulary confirmed that search warrants were executed at four addresses on the island on Wednesday “in support of an ongoing NCA investigation”. There were no arrests.

More than a dozen law enforcement officers are understood to have turned up unexpectedly at the Knox House building in the island’s capital, Douglas, where the Isle of Man PPE Medpro company is registered. One witness described the building being guarded by officers both at its front and rear.

The officers are understood to have seized documents, computers, phones and other electronic devices from the building.

Also searched was a Wardour Street address in central London, the office of the UK-registered PPE Medpro company that was awarded two government contracts worth £203m. A member of staff at that building told the Guardian: “It’s a ‘no comment’ all round.” Lawyers for PPE Medpro declined to comment.

There is no evidence that the NCA’s investigation is connected to matters that have previously been the subject of public controversy. However, the investigation is likely to resurface questions about the wider £12bn in PPE contracts the government awarded during the pandemic under emergency rules that bypassed normal competitive tender processes.

It will also put renewed focus on both PPE Medpro and the process through which the company secured its government contracts. It has been the focus of multiple controversies in recent months that have embroiled Mone and other senior Tories including Michael Gove, Theodore Agnew and James Bethell.

The company was one of 51 businesses that were processed through a “VIP lane” operated by the government to fast-track companies that had been recommended by politically connected individuals.

The Guardian has previously reported that Mone approached Gove, Lord Agnew and Lord Bethell on behalf of PPE Medpro. All were at the time ministers involved in pandemic procurement.

Mone appears to have been instrumental in PPE Medpro being entered into the “high priority” VIP lane by Agnew in May 2020.

In January the Guardian reported that leaked files appeared to suggest Mone and Barrowman were secretly involved in the PPE Medpro business. At the time, Mone’s lawyers said in response that the Guardian’s findings were “grounded entirely on supposition and speculation and not based on accuracy”.

The House of Lords standards commissioner, Martin Jelley, then launched an investigation, which is still ongoing, into whether Mone’s links to the company breached rules relating to members. She has denied any wrongdoing.

Responding to previous stories, Mone’s lawyers have said any suggestion of an association or collusion between the Tory peer and PPE Medpro would be “inaccurate” and that she was not involved in the business. “Baroness Mone is neither an investor, director or shareholder in any way associated with PPE Medpro. She has never had any role or function in PPE Medpro, nor in the process by which contracts were awarded to PPE Medpro.”

Mone’s lawyers have said that after she undertook the “simple, solitary and brief step” of referring PPE Medpro to the government she did nothing further in respect of the company.

Lawyers for Barrowman have similarly distanced him from the company, but they have not commented on whether he financially benefited from the firm.

It is not known whether the searches of PPE Medpro-associated properties are part of a wider investigation by the NCA into potential fraud related to PPE procurement during the pandemic. In a statement, the NCA said: “The NCA does not routinely confirm or deny the existence of investigations or the names of those who may or may not be under investigation.”

PPE Medpro’s first government contract, worth £80.85m for the supply of face masks, was awarded by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) in late May 2020. The second, a £122m contract to supply 25m sterile surgical gowns, was awarded in June 2020 but has been the subject of a significant contractual dispute.

The government rejected PPE Medpro’s gowns after checks in the UK and has said it is seeking to recover its money through a dispute resolution process. PPE Medpro has maintained that it complied with the terms of its gowns contract and is entitled to keep the money it was paid.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...nvestigation-ppe-firm-linked-to-michelle-mone
 
Should UK be worried about a rise in cases in South Africa?

South Africa is experiencing a COVID resurgence linked to two new forms of Omicron - BA.4 and BA.5.

As we have previously reported in this blog, these sub-lineages have already been found, at low levels, here in the UK - so what's behind the rise in cases in South Africa and should that be a cause for alarm for Britons "learning to live" with COVID?

Not too much is known about the new versions of Omicron but Dr Nicole Wolter, of South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases, said mutations in BA.4 and BA.5 could make the virus more adept at dodging immunity.

"In addition, we have had a relaxing of restrictions, as well as moving into winter and therefore experiencing colder temperatures," she said.

Dr Wolter said there had been only a "slight increase in hospitalisations" of late and, while work was ongoing to understand the sub-lineages, there is no evidence to suggest they are more severe than other forms of Omicron.

Research - and it's important to state it's not yet peer-reviewed - from a team including Prof Alex Sigal, from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, suggests people who have previously had the BA.1 strain of Omicron have little protection against BA.4 or BA.5 - though protection is much better when previous infection is combined with vaccination.

There is also evidence - again, a pre-print, from a team including Professor Tulio de Oliveira, director of the Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation at Stellenbosch University - that BA.4 and BA.5 have a similar growth advantage over BA.2 as BA.2 had over BA.1.

The one advantage the UK could have over South Africa is the second Omicron wave the country has endured.

"South Africa was different, as [it] did not have a second Omicron wave and the previous immunity of BA.1 is probably waning," said Prof De Oliveira.

Professor Christina Pagel, of UCL, said: "I think [it is] very likely [BA.4 and BA.5] will become dominant here."

She said that at best it would be a small wave and at worse similar to previous Omicron waves.

SKY
 
No quarantine for Indian travellers to UK fully vaccinated with Covishield or another UK-approved vaccine from October 11: Alex Ellis, British High Commissioner to India
 
There are early signs of a possible increase in the number of people testing positive for Covid in England and Northern Ireland, officials from the Office for National Statistics say.

Their report suggests the small rise is likely to be driven by the BA.4 and BA.5 variants of Omicron.

Studies show these variants may be able to spread slightly more easily than "older" Omicron variants.

The latest estimates suggest around 990,000 people in the UK have Covid.

That is about 1.5% of the population (roughly one in 65 people) - up from about one in 70 the week before.

The latest data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) covers the week ending 2 June.

BBC
 
New COVID data suggests that after months of declining case rates, the number of people testing positive across the UK is starting to go up again.

For the week ending 2 June, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said there were "early signs of a possible increase in percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus".

It was most noticeable in England and Northern Ireland, where the positivity rate is one in every 70 people and one in every 65 people respectively.

And it is being driven by new sub-variants of Omicron - BA.4 and BA.5.

A separate Imperial College study released on Tuesday suggests that being infected with Omicron does not provide much immune protection from being reinfected.

So with infection rates on the rise and more chance of reinfection - should we be worried?

With COVID tests no longer free and widely available, experts now rely on people's responses to the ONS weekly infection survey to see whether cases are going up or down.

After months of steep decreases, the ONS data shows positivity rates flattening at the end of May in each of the four nations, although it says trends for Scotland and Wales are "uncertain".

But since then, there has been an uptick, largely driven by Omicron's two new sub-variants - designated variants of concern (VOC) by the UK Health and Security Agency (UKHSA) on 20 May.

Dr Stephen Griffin, a virologist at the University of Leeds, tells Sky News: "Although overall infection levels have been coming down, if you look at the variant split, BA.4 and BA.5 in particular are becoming more dominant.

"There are some interesting changes with those two because they have increased antibody-evasive properties."

The Imperial study published this week was carried out on 700 London health workers from March 2020 onwards.

Although they all had three vaccine doses, their Omicron reinfection rates differed.

That is because, they say, people's protection against new COVID variants depends on their specific vaccination and infection history - a concept called immune imprinting or 'original antigenic sin'.

Dr Peter English, former Public Health England consultant in communicable disease control, says: "There was a big concern in the beginning with vaccines and original antigenic sin.

"It's whereby if you are infected with an earlier variant and produce an immune response to it, when you're infected with a new variant, your body essentially produces the original immune response, which is the wrong one, because it doesn't realise it's a new variant, which needs a different immune response.

"We're beginning to see signs that this is the case with these new Omicron sub-variants.

"So we might have been unduly hopeful it wouldn't be."

Dr Griffin adds: "The reason these variants are spreading still is because the pool of people they can infect is growing - because people who have already been infected can be infected again."

Can we call it a 'new wave'?

The UK's first Omicron wave came in December, soon after South Africa's, followed by a second driven by sub-variant BA.2 in around March.

BA.2 still makes up most UK infections, and while BA.3 largely remained in South Africa, the emergence of BA.4 and BA.5 in May is effectively another wave, Dr Griffin says.

But he adds: "It's difficult to predict how big this wave might be."

South Africa has already had a BA.4/5 wave, with cases already flattening. But it has been completely different to the one experienced in Portugal - where death rates were much higher.

"This speaks to the idea that as time goes on it's going to get more and more difficult to predict how countries will fare with one variant or another," he says.

"That's because we have a different pattern of immunity - we're in a new era now where that is really important."

So comparing how BA.4 and BA.5 have affected other countries, does not appear to be useful.

Should we be worried?

While the majority of Britons have returned to normal life, cases going up again will have consequences, Dr English warns.

"Some people remain very anxious, but there are many others who have decided they can't cope with COVID being a thing anymore so they're going to pretend it doesn't exist. And that will mean more risk for all of us."

The virus being more prevalent again will force the clinically vulnerable back into their homes and could see more people with Long COVID or more serious symptoms of it, he adds.

Vaccination rates and immunity from vaccines have also waned and with masks and isolation no longer mandatory, it is likely to spread quicker than before.

Both scientists predict that as in previous years, cases will increase in the winter with more time spent indoors.

But Dr English adds: "We shouldn't be complacent, rates are going up quite quickly here - and in the US.

"People will come back from their summer holidays and schools will become a driver for transmission as they have done before.

"But I think we should be a bit worried - even now."

"Prevalence of this virus matters," Dr Griffin says. "We're about to see the number of Omicron deaths overtake Delta - even though it is less likely to cause severe disease.

"At the moment there's no public health safety net that says 'this will happen if we don't do this, so here's what we can do to stop that'.

"And it's that safety net, not lockdowns, but those sensible measures, that would allow all parts of society to live with this virus."

SKY
 
COVID-19 cases have surged by nearly half in a week, official figures show.

Last week, an estimated 1,415,600 people had coronavirus in the UK, up 425,800 or 43%.
 
Covid infections are up across the UK, according to latest figures that capture the Jubilee weekend of partying.

An estimated 1.4 million people or one in 45 has the virus - up from one in 65 the week before. That's a rise of 43%.

Experts say two new fast-spreading subvariants of Omicron -called BA.4 and BA.5 - are behind some of the new infections.

People can get catch them even if they have recently had other types of Covid.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS), which compiles the data, says it is too early to say if this is the start of another wave.

Millions gathered to celebrate the Queen's Platinum Jubilee up and down the UK between 2 and 5 June, which will have given Covid many opportunities to spread.

It takes a few days, usually, for people to start showing symptoms or testing positive after catching it, which means the latest data covers some of that Jubilee mixing.

The previous week's data had shown the beginnings of a possible rise.

The data is collated by testing thousands of people from UK households - whether they have symptoms or not - to estimate how much virus is around.

In the week ending 11 June, the Covid rates are:

One in 50 in England - up from one in 70 the week before
One in 45 in Wales - up from one in 75
One in 45 in Northern Ireland - up from one in 65
One in 30 in Scotland - up from one in 40

After a period of low case rates, the UK is now seeing increases in Covid outbreaks within care homes and in hospitals, among those aged 80 and over.

But BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron are not thought to be any more lethal than other types of Covid. Vaccines are still saving lives.

Dr Mary Ramsay, from the UK Health Security Agency, said: "It is encouraging that we are not seeing an increase in intensive care unit admissions, but we are monitoring data closely and assessing the possible impact of subvariants BA.4 and BA.5.

"As we enter summer, it's still important to remember that Covid-19 has not gone away, and to get vaccinated to reduce the risk of becoming seriously ill with the virus."

BA.4 and BA.5 were first identified in South Africa at the start of the year and may soon become the dominant strains in Europe and the US, health experts say.

Ever since it first emerged, Covid has been mutating or shape-shifting, creating new variants and subvariants.

Lots of people have built up some immunity from past infections and vaccination, which is helping to make Covid less risky overall.

But the new subvariants do appear to be spreading more easily. This is partly because immunity may be waning, but also because of the genetic mutations which the virus has undergone.

Many countries have also lifted their Covid restrictions, meaning people are mixing more, which gives the virus more chances to spread.

BBC
 
The mayor of Luton and two local councillors have apologised after they were pictured at a party breaking lockdown rules.

Mayor Tahir Malik was at the outdoor gathering on Tuesday (21 July) with councillors Waheed Akbar and Asif Masood, and about nine other men - double the number allowed under coronavirus laws.

Photos of the event in the Bedfordshire town were shared on Facebook, including one of the mayor with a mask hanging below his face, prompting anger from residents who are potentially facing a local lockdown.

On Thursday, Luton was placed on the government's "area of intervention" list - the same level on the coronavirus watchlist as Leicester, where stricter measures were introduced - following an increase in COVID-19 cases.

In the pictures of the party, none of the men were wearing face masks and they were all sitting close together around a long table as they ate and chatted.

Since 1 June, a maximum of six people have been able to meet outdoors, including in gardens, as long as those from different households stay two metres apart, or more than one metre with a face covering.

The three Labour councillors said in a statement to Luton Today: "We apologise unreservedly to the people of Luton for our breach of the lockdown rules.

"We attended what we believed was going to be a small socially distanced gathering, in line with the government guidelines.

"During the course of the event, the arrival of additional guests meant the rules were breached.

"We should have left immediately, and it is a matter of sincere regret for each of us that we did not do so.

"It is all of our responsibility to follow the guidelines. We are sorry that we did not live up to the standards that are rightly expected of us."

A spokesman from the eastern branch of the local Labour Party said the Chief Whip was investigating the lockdown breach.

"It is essential that everybody follows social distancing measures in order to protect the public from COVID-19," the spokesman told Luton Today.

"It is even more important for those in positions of authority to be setting the right example.

"The Labour Party investigates all complaints received and where rules have been breached, action will be taken in line with the Labour Party's processes."

Luton Borough Council confirmed it received a complaint and is investigating the incident.

Sky News has contacted the mayor and the two councillors and asked for a response.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...at-party-as-town-placed-on-watchlist-12035790

Still apologizing!

==

A newly appointed deputy mayor who broke lockdown rules in July 2020 said it was a mistake he "regrets".

Asif Masood, a Labour councillor in Luton, admitted attending a prayer meeting in a private garden.

It came shortly after the town had been designated as an "area of intervention" by Public Health England.

He said that when more than six people arrived he "should have gone home", and he would use his new ceremonial role to "serve the town".

"I'm really sorry, I made a mistake I regret; I apologise; I shouldn't have been there when more than six people arrived, I should have gone home," he told BBC Three Counties Radio.

The councillor was officially appointed deputy mayor by Luton Borough Council on 14 June.

Despite what happened he said he was the right man for the job and he was working "to rebuild that trust and serve this town and to do something for our town - work with the local churches and serve the honourable people".

After the lockdown breach, a council adjudication panel met in 2020 to hear from Mr Masood to two fellow Labour councillors who also attended the prayer meeting - Tahir Malik and Waheed Akbar.

The panel said no formal sanctions would be imposed as it said it could only take action on a breach of code of conduct when councillors were acting in an official capacity, which they were not as they were at a private prayer meeting.

Mr Masood said he had donated about £800 to two Luton charities as a result.

In his new role he said he wanted to "do something better for this town and I am making amends" and that he wanted to concentrate on "dealing with issues involving knife crime and drugs".

"I am servant of people," he added.

BBC
 
A number of Glastonbury Festival revellers have reported testing positive for COVID-19 in the days after the music event.

An estimated 200,000 music fans flocked to Worthy Farm in east Somerset for the 37th iteration of Glastonbury last week.
 
Captain Sir Tom Moore has died with coronavirus.

The 100-year-old, who raised almost £33m for the NHS, was taken to Bedford Hospital after requiring help with his breathing on Sunday.

His daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore said he had been treated for pneumonia over the past few weeks and last week tested positive for Covid-19.

The Army veteran won the nation's hearts by walking 100 laps of his garden before his 100th birthday.

In a statement, Capt Sir Tom's daughters Mrs Ingram-Moore and Lucy Teixeira said: "It is with great sadness that we announce the death of our dear father, Captain Sir Tom Moore.

"We are so grateful that we were with him during the last hours of his life; Hannah, Benjie and Georgia by his bedside and Lucy on FaceTime.

"We spent hours chatting to him, reminiscing about our childhood and our wonderful mother. We shared laughter and tears together.

"The last year of our father's life was nothing short of remarkable. He was rejuvenated and experienced things he'd only ever dreamed of.

"Whilst he'd been in so many hearts for just a short time, he was an incredible father and grandfather, and he will stay alive in our hearts forever."

Capt Sir Tom's daughters said the care he received from the NHS was "extraordinary".

They said staff had been "unfalteringly professional, kind and compassionate and have given us many more years with him than we ever would have imagined".

The Army veteran, originally from Keighley in West Yorkshire, came to prominence by walking 100 laps of his garden in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire, before his 100th birthday during the first national lockdown.

Capt Tom joined the Army at the beginning of World War Two, serving in India and Myanmar, then known as Burma.

The Captain Tom Foundation is being investigated over concerns about the charity's management and independence from the late veteran's family.

The Charity Commission opened a case into the charity in March 2021, just a month after Sir Tom's passing, and began reviewing the set-up of the organisation.

SKY
 
The number of people in the UK with COVID has risen by 32% to almost 2.3 million, latest figures show.

It is up from 1.7 million people the previous week and the highest estimate for total infections since late April.

But it is still below the record high of 4.9 million which was reached at the end of March.

Omicron variants BA.4 and BA.5 are likely behind the latest surge, the Office for National Statistics said.

They are thought to be the most dominant strains in the UK.

The virus continues to be most prevalent in Scotland, where 288,200 people were likely to test positive for COVID last week, or one in 18.

This is up week on week from 250,700, or one in 20.

In England, more than 1.8 million people were likely to have had the virus last week, the equivalent of around one in 30.

This is up from 1.3 million, or one in 40 people, the previous week.

Wales has seen infections rise sharply to 106,500 people, or one in 30, up from 68,500.

In Northern Ireland, infections rose to an estimated 71,000 people, or one in 25, up from 59,900, or one in 30.

Sarah Crofts, ONS head of analytical outputs for the COVID-19 infection survey, said: "Across the UK we've seen a continued increase of over half a million infections, likely caused by the growth of BA.4 and BA.5 variants.

"This rise is seen across all ages, countries and regions of England.

"We will continue to monitor the data closely to see if this growth continues in the coming weeks."

SKY
 
The UK has surpassed 200,000 deaths involving coronavirus, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics.

Up to the start of July, a total of 200,247 COVID deaths were registered, the ONS said on Wednesday.

The 200,000 milestone was reached on 25 June, but not revealed until today due to a delay in registration.

In the week ending 1 July, 11,828 deaths were registered nationwide, with 412 (3.48%) involving coronavirus. COVID deaths were up 65 on the previous week.
 
The number of people testing positive for COVID in the UK has risen to almost 3.5 million, latest figures show.

In England, an estimated 2,873,600 people had coronavirus in the week to 6 July, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

There were 334,000 cases in Scotland, 183,500 in Wales, and 107,600 in Northern Ireland.

The total is higher than last week's 2.7 million, but remains well below the UK's record high of 4.9 million reported at the end of March.

According to the ONS, the estimated percentage of the community population - that is people not in hospitals, care homes or other institutional settings - who had COVID in the latest week was 5.27% in England, or one in 19 people.

The figure was 6.04% in Wales, one in 17 people, 5.86% in Northern Ireland, also one in 17 people, and 6.34% in Scotland, or one in 16 people.

"Infections increased in all English regions and age groups," the ONS added.

The figures are taken from PCR tests using nose and throat swabs.

Although this spike in cases has been less severe than those seen previously, the relentless pressure is taking its toll on emergency departments.

Every patient in hospital with the virus means another bed is taken up, meaning longer waits for other patients.

Dr Mohammed Munavvar told Sky News that his hospital's work to tackle NHS waiting lists had been making a dent, but now that has been disrupted.

He said: "Other patients cannot be admitted and treated, and patients have been waiting for a long time already for their procedures and their treatment is once again getting delayed.

"That is putting a lot of pressure on the system and on the restorative work, which had started very well."

SKY
 
News summary:-

• Covid infections in the UK jump by 29% in a week, latest data from the Office for National Statistics shows.
• Weekly coronavirus figures show 3.5 million cases were recorded in the week to 6 July, up from 2.7 million the week before.
• One in 20 in the UK now has the virus, up from one in 25 the week before.
• Two sub-variants of Omicron - called BA.4 and BA.5 - are driving new infections. Jabs are still offering strong protection against severe illness.
• But rising Covid admissions, combined with staff sickness and the heatwave, are putting increasing strain on the NHS.
• Nearly three million adults in England have still not come forward for a Covid vaccine, ONS data reveals.
• Meanwhile a new fast-spreading variant BA.2.75 has been detected in India, UK, US, Australia, Germany and Canada.
 
The number of people testing positive for COVID in the UK has risen 29% to almost 3.5 million, latest figures show.

In England, an estimated 2,873,600 people had coronavirus in the week to 6 July, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
 
The number of people testing positive for COVID in the UK has risen 29% to almost 3.5 million, latest figures show.

In England, an estimated 2,873,600 people had coronavirus in the week to 6 July, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

There were 334,000 cases in Scotland, 183,500 in Wales, and 107,600 in Northern Ireland.

The total is the largest since mid-April and 29% higher than last week's 2.7 million, but remains well below the UK's record high of 4.9 million reported at the end of March.
 
A new autumn wave of coronavirus has seen the number of patients in hospital with the virus hit the highest level since August, the latest NHS data suggests.

Figures show 7,024 people were in hospital with coronavirus in England as of 8am on 28 September.

This is up 37% from 5,142 the previous week - and is the highest number seen since 19 August.

With universal free testing wound down at the beginning of this year, health officials rely mainly on hospital data and the weekly ONS infection survey to understand how COVID is spreading.
 
Covid is making a bit of a comeback.

Lots more employee absences this week I’ve heard.
 
The British response to Covid has been a triumph of self-delusion about the imaginary triumphs of the NHS.

Yes, the UK started vaccinating early. Unfortunately they got stuck at 76% of over-5's double vaccinated and are not even in the global Top Fifty, looking up at more highly vaccinated nations like Cambodia and Nicaragua.

The death toll is a disgrace. The UK has a population 2.6 times larger than Australia, which has had 4,000 deaths (and includes deaths longer after infection than the UK does). So the UK death toll could acceptably be 2.6 x 4000 = 10,560. But it's 200,000!

And then the economic toll! Western Australia and Queensland, which had the most tightly sealed borders (even though they both had flights from Wuhan at the start of the pandemic) at the time that vaccinations entered use had the world's Numbers 1 and 3 regional economies BECAUSE of their tight border closures. Oh, and did I mention, with tight border restrictions (even between states, even in border towns), Australia's suicide rate FELL by a record 6.2%?

The UK Covid response is a Monumental Failure, and yet they think they have done OK. And people think the problem was too many restrictions, when it clearly was having not nearly enough restrictions.
 
Last edited:
<b>It's now clear we're heading into another COVID wave. For the fourth week in a row the Office for National Statistics' household infection survey has shown a rise in cases.</b>

According to the data, an estimated 1.7 million people in the UK would have tested positive for COVID last week, up from an estimated 1.3 million the week before.

This is the highest total since late July, but it's still lower than the 3.8 million weekly infections seen at the peak of the summer wave in early July.

With the exception of Scotland, where there's no clear rise in cases, the trends are similar in all other parts of the UK. But while they're rising, the current uptick in cases isn't as steep as we saw with other recent waves of infection.

Despite the fact cases are rising a bit more slowly than before, it's who is getting infected that's more relevant to the NHS. A potentially good sign is that cases in secondary school children in England appear to have peaked.

More concerning, is that infections are rising fastest in the oldest, and therefore most vulnerable, age group.

The thing to remember of course, is that older people in the UK are very well vaccinated, nearly 94% of over 80s in England have had at least three vaccine doses. More than half have so far taken up the offer of a booster dose this autumn. From today, anyone over 50 is being invited to book a booster shot.

Commenting on the figures, Mary Ramsay, head of immunisations at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said: "I think it is to be expected."

"This is the first year where people are going to be mixing normally so I'm expecting that there is going to be more infection going around.

"The big difference obviously is that most people have been vaccinated. And, certainly the older age group, is very, very highly vaccinated so that should protect against more severe forms of disease."

What's behind the current surge in cases? It's likely a combination of factors. Immunity from the spring booster vaccine campaign is waning and colder temperatures mean more people are mixing indoors.

There are also a number of new Omicron-related variants evolving in response to our vaccines. The chart below is based on the genetic sequences of viruses sampled from people testing positive.

All the variants shown are forms of Omicron. BA.1 (in blue) caused the original Omicron wave around Christmas, its descendant, BA.2 (in beige) caused another wave in March, before BA.5 (in brown) came along in July and caused a corresponding wave.

What's interesting now, are the three relatives of BA.5 (down in the bottom right-hand corner) that are rising rapidly and could be on course to become dominant by dodging the immune protection we've been getting from vaccines or previous infection, just like their ancestors did over the course of the year.

But significantly, for the time being at least, is that the current wave isn't being driven by a new variant.

And as with all things COVID, the past is not necessarily a good predictor of the future. The boosters now being offered to people are the first use of "bivalent" vaccines. These include both the original COVID strain, as well as an Omicron specific vaccine. It's hoped these jabs might be better matched to combat the Omicron-related variants that are emerging.

When it comes to the emerging variants, "we're keeping a close eye", says the UKHSA's Mary Ramsay, "But that's not probably the main reason for what we're seeing at the moment. The main reason is probably just the fact that we're going back to normal and mixing more."

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-cases-are-rising-again-do-we-need-to-worry-12720327
 
<b>It's now clear we're heading into another COVID wave. For the fourth week in a row the Office for National Statistics' household infection survey has shown a rise in cases.</b>

According to the data, an estimated 1.7 million people in the UK would have tested positive for COVID last week, up from an estimated 1.3 million the week before.

This is the highest total since late July, but it's still lower than the 3.8 million weekly infections seen at the peak of the summer wave in early July.

With the exception of Scotland, where there's no clear rise in cases, the trends are similar in all other parts of the UK. But while they're rising, the current uptick in cases isn't as steep as we saw with other recent waves of infection.

Despite the fact cases are rising a bit more slowly than before, it's who is getting infected that's more relevant to the NHS. A potentially good sign is that cases in secondary school children in England appear to have peaked.

More concerning, is that infections are rising fastest in the oldest, and therefore most vulnerable, age group.

The thing to remember of course, is that older people in the UK are very well vaccinated, nearly 94% of over 80s in England have had at least three vaccine doses. More than half have so far taken up the offer of a booster dose this autumn. From today, anyone over 50 is being invited to book a booster shot.

Commenting on the figures, Mary Ramsay, head of immunisations at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said: "I think it is to be expected."

"This is the first year where people are going to be mixing normally so I'm expecting that there is going to be more infection going around.

"The big difference obviously is that most people have been vaccinated. And, certainly the older age group, is very, very highly vaccinated so that should protect against more severe forms of disease."

What's behind the current surge in cases? It's likely a combination of factors. Immunity from the spring booster vaccine campaign is waning and colder temperatures mean more people are mixing indoors.

There are also a number of new Omicron-related variants evolving in response to our vaccines. The chart below is based on the genetic sequences of viruses sampled from people testing positive.

All the variants shown are forms of Omicron. BA.1 (in blue) caused the original Omicron wave around Christmas, its descendant, BA.2 (in beige) caused another wave in March, before BA.5 (in brown) came along in July and caused a corresponding wave.

What's interesting now, are the three relatives of BA.5 (down in the bottom right-hand corner) that are rising rapidly and could be on course to become dominant by dodging the immune protection we've been getting from vaccines or previous infection, just like their ancestors did over the course of the year.

But significantly, for the time being at least, is that the current wave isn't being driven by a new variant.

And as with all things COVID, the past is not necessarily a good predictor of the future. The boosters now being offered to people are the first use of "bivalent" vaccines. These include both the original COVID strain, as well as an Omicron specific vaccine. It's hoped these jabs might be better matched to combat the Omicron-related variants that are emerging.

When it comes to the emerging variants, "we're keeping a close eye", says the UKHSA's Mary Ramsay, "But that's not probably the main reason for what we're seeing at the moment. The main reason is probably just the fact that we're going back to normal and mixing more."

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-cases-are-rising-again-do-we-need-to-worry-12720327

Here we go again with the scaremongering
 
COVID lab blunder linked to deaths of 23 people, investigators estimate

A mistake at a lab which saw thousands of positive COVID-19 cases reported as negative could have led to the deaths of 23 people, according to new estimates.

The errors at Immensa Health Clinic Ltd in Wolverhampton meant around 39,000 PCR tests were reported as negative when they should have been positive between 2 September and 12 October 2021.

Most of these cases were in the South West of England, particularly in areas of Bristol, Gloucestershire, Somerset and Wiltshire.

As a result, many people would have continued with their daily lives and not self-isolated even though they had COVID.

Experts from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) have estimated the errors led to about 55,000 additional infections, with each person who received a false result going on to infect an average of two other people.

Researchers also estimated that there were about 680 additional hospital admissions "that may not otherwise have occurred".

"Similarly, we estimate that there may have been just over 20 additional deaths in these most affected areas," they added.

£170m in government contracts

Immensa was given a £119million government contract in October 2020 to urgently "develop volume for PCR testing for COVID in line with test and trace requirements".
Advertisement

The firm was later given another £50m contract to facilitate additional testing capacity.

Reports in The Sun at the time featured footage of staff at the lab appearing to fight, drink alcohol and play football.

Laboratory testing at the centre was suspended as a result.

UKHSA lead investigator Richard Gleave said "staff errors" were the "immediate cause" of incorrect test results in Wolverhampton.

But he said there was "no single action that NHS Test and Trace could have taken differently to prevent this error arising in the private laboratory".

The UK Health Security Agency's (UKHSA) chief executive Dr Jenny Harries commented: "I fully accept the findings and recommendations made in this report, many of which were implemented as soon as UKHSA discovered the incident.

"These ongoing improvements will enhance our ability to spot problems sooner where they do arise."

SKY
 
<b>Former Health Secretary Matt Hancock says he was warned 820,000 people in the UK could die from Covid two months before the country went into lockdown.</b>

In his new diaries on the pandemic, the MP says in January 2020 he was told by England's chief medical officer the toll was "a reasonable case scenario" if restrictions were not introduced.

Figures show more than <u>200,000</u> people with Covid have died in the UK to date.

The government has set up an inquiry into its handling of the pandemic.

In his new book, Mr Hancock says that when he mentioned the projected death toll to other cabinet ministers, their reaction was "somewhat 'shrug shrug' - essentially because they didn't really believe it".

He wrote: "I am constantly feeling that others, who aren't focused on this every day, are weeks behind what's going on."

He said that 11 days later, England's chief medical officer Sir Chris Whitty also warned transmission would be so high that "almost everyone would catch it".

Mr Hancock wrote: "In his characteristically understated way, sitting at the back peeling a tangerine, Chris Whitty quietly informed everyone that in the reasonable worst-case scenario as many as 820,000 people in the UK may die.

“The whole room froze. We were looking at a human catastrophe on a scale not seen here for a century."

Mr Hancock's <I>Pandemic Diaries: The Inside Story Of Britain's Battle Against Covid </I> is being serialised in the Daily Mail, with the West Suffolk MP set to donate all proceeds to NHS charities and causes supporting dyslexia.

The first extract was published in the paper on Saturday and comes shortly after Mr Hancock reappeared in Westminster following his controversial appearance on ITV's reality show I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here.

Mr Hancock was criticised by MPs for his three-week stint in the jungle, where he placed third.

He was suspended from the parliamentary Conservative Party after joining the show, and now sits as an independent MP.

In the book, the former health secretary also defended his handling of one of the most controversial episodes of the pandemic - the decision to release care home residents from hospital without testing, which was blamed for thousands of deaths.

A diary entry on 2 April 2020, notes: "The tragic but honest truth is we don't have enough testing capacity to check anyway. It's an utter nightmare, but it's the reality."

BBC News
 
Face masks should be worn again on public transport, experts say, as the Arcturus Covid variant continues to spread.

Five people have died from the strain, according to the UK Health Security Agency, while 135 sequences have been detected in the UK so far, and there are believed to be around 104 cases as some people have been sequenced twice.
 

JN.1 Covid variant: WHO charts its rapid global spread​

A sub-variant of the Omicron strain of coronavirus has been classified as a "variant of interest" by the World Health Organization, because of "its rapidly increasing spread".

JN.1 has been found in many countries around the world, including India, China, UK and the United States.

The risk to the public is currently low and current vaccines continue to offer protection, the WHO says.

But it warns Covid and other infections could rise this winter.

Respiratory viruses such as flu, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and childhood pneumonia are also on the rise in the northern hemisphere.

The virus which causes Covid is constantly changing over time and sometimes this leads to new variants developing.

Omicron has been the globally dominant variant for some time.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is currently tracking a number of variants of interest linked to Omicron - including JN.1 - although none of them are deemed to be concerning.

But JN.1 is spreading quickly in many corners of the world.

It is currently the fastest-growing variant in the United States, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, accounting for 15-29% of infections.

The UK Health Security Agency says JN.1 currently makes up around 7% of positive Covid tests analysed in a lab. It said it would continue to monitor all available data on this and other variants.

Source: BBC
 
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