Windsor Star

Britain nears grim milestone: 20K deaths

- ANDY BRUC and WILLIAM JAMES

LONDON • Close to 20,000 people have died in hospital in the United Kingdom after testing positive for the new coronaviru­s, data showed on Friday, as Britain approached a milestone it had hoped never to reach.

As the death toll rose relentless­ly, speculatio­n mounted that Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who himself spent three nights in intensive care battling COVID-19 earlier this month, would soon get back to work after U.S. President Donald Trump said he “sounded incredible” on the phone.

Whenever Johnson does return, he will face the conundrum of how to come out of a lockdown that is destroying swaths of the economy, while avoiding a deadly second wave of infections.

“In general, we’ll have to take decisions based on the best available scientific and health advice and it’s not going to be a case of choosing between the economy and public health,” Johnson’s spokesman said during a daily briefing.

The government has so far refused to discuss how it plans to ease the lockdown, but is coming under increased pressure to do so as evidence of economic disaster accumulate­s.

In the latest of a series of alarming signs, retail sales fell by the most on record in March. Even a surge in panic-buying ahead of the lockdown was not enough to outweigh a plunge in sales of clothing and most other goods.

According to budget forecaster­s, the economy could be heading into its deepest recession in more than 300 years even after the finance ministry and the Bank of England rushed out a string of emergency stimulus measures.

The latest statistics on infections and deaths made even darker reading.

The number of people who have died in hospital across the U.K. after testing positive for the coronaviru­s has risen to 19,506, up by 684 in a day.

Britain has the fifth-worst official death toll in the world, after the U.S., Italy, Spain and France, and government scientists have said that the death rate will only start to decline quickly in another couple of weeks.

Passing the 20,000 mark will be an uncomforta­ble moment for the government, whose chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance, said on March 17 that keeping the toll under that number would be “a good outcome.”

In reality, the total death toll is likely to be thousands higher than that already reported. More comprehens­ive figures that include deaths in the community, such as in nursing homes, show the daily hospital toll underestim­ated the number of COVID fatalities by around 40 per cent as of April 10.

Johnson’s government, which was slow to impose a lockdown, has come under fire over limited testing capacity and for failing to deliver enough personal protective equipment to front-line health workers.

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