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COVID-19 crisis could revive as infections surge in UK, govt. adviser warns

People walk on the street in Croydon, south London, the UK, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease, on September 27, 2020. (Photo by Reuters)

The United Kingdom’s coronavirus outbreak could worsen again surprisingly quickly and the country is not yet out of the woods, the British government’s chief medical adviser says, as infections surge ahead of the lifting of legal restrictions.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is removing most pandemic-related restrictions in the UK on July 19, saying a rapid rollout of COVID-19 vaccination has largely broken the link between infections and serious illness or death.

Some scientists are worried, though. The reported daily cases are at their highest since January, while the reproduction “R” number remains above one, indicating a continued exponential growth of cases.

“We are not by any means out of the woods yet on this,” Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said during a webinar hosted by the Science Museum late on Thursday.

He said the low numbers of people in hospitals currently could escalate in the next couple of months.

“It doesn’t take many doublings until we’re in actually quite scary numbers again … I don’t think we should underestimate the fact that we could get into trouble again surprisingly fast,” Whitty said.

The Office for National Statistics estimated that as many as 1 in 95 people in England were infected with COVID-19 in the week to July 10, the highest prevalence since February.

“New cases of Delta will lead to long COVID, hospital admissions, and deaths,” said James Naismith, the director of the Rosalind Franklin Institute. “The ratios between these have been massively changed by the safe and effective vaccines we are administering but the link is not eliminated.”

‘This is wrecking the economy’

Britain’s COVID-19 death toll is among the highest in the world, even though two-thirds of its adult population have been fully vaccinated.

On Monday, the last remaining businesses still closed in England, including nightclubs, will be able to reopen, but business leaders have warned that the self-isolation requirement for people exposed to positive cases could hinder the economy.

Over 520,000 contact tracing alerts were sent through the National Health Service app in the week to July 7.

“[In] the hospitality sector, 20% of staff are isolating; the health service, up to 25% of staff are absent; and buses and trains delayed,” Karan Bilimoria, the president of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), told LBC radio. “This cannot go on… This is wrecking the economy.”

A spokesperson for Johnson said that “self-isolation remains one of the best tools that we have to tackle the virus.”

(Source: Agencies)


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