Business Standard

England easing lockdown too soon, advisers warn

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England risks losing control of the coronaviru­s pandemic again because it is starting to lift its lockdown without a fully operationa­l track and trace programme in place, three senior scientific advisers warned on Saturday.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said England’s lockdown measures will be eased cautiously from Monday, aided by a track and trace system that launched on Thursday.

The advisers warned, however, that the system was not yet in full operation and risked being overwhelme­d by the around 8,000 new infections still occurring every day outside of hospitals and care homes.

John Edmunds, from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and a member of Britain’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (SAGE), said the government was taking a risk.

“Track and trace was only launched the day before yesterday, so we can't be sure that that is working effectivel­y yet and yet we’re going ahead and making these changes anyway,” he told Sky News. “I think that that is rather dangerous.” Edmunds’ comments were echoed by two other SAGE members: Peter Horby, also the chairman of the New and Emerging Respirator­y Virus Threats Advisory Group, and Jeremy Farrar, the director of the Wellcome Trust.

One of the slowest countries to lock down, Britain is now one of the worst-hit by the pandemic, with more than 48,000 deaths and more than 270,000 people testing positive.

To try to contain the virus while also allowing the economy to recover, the test and trace system will ask contacts of people who test positive to self-isolate for 14 days, even if they have no symptoms. An app is not yet ready for the scheme.

Horby of the University of Oxford said there was still too much uncertaint­y about what would happen to the virus' reproducti­on rate — commonly known as R — if schools reopen and other activities resume.

He added that the track, trace and isolate system was not expected to be fully operationa­l — with local teams working to stamp out clusters of cases — until the end of June. “Returning to a situation where we’ve lost control again is far worse than a week or two of social measures,” he told BBC Radio.

Government officials have repeatedly said they are following “the science” as they respond to the pandemic, but Edmunds said the decision to ease the lockdown from Monday was political.

“My frustratio­n has been recently at least that they’re pretending that they’re not making a decision, that in fact it’s us who are making the decision, and that’s not really the case,” he said. “They have to make the decision and clearly they have.” The prime minister’s office said it had at all times been informed by the data and evidence.

The devolved government­s in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are responsibl­e for their own public health policy.

Stimulus package

Britain’s government is planning to launch a big stimulus package before the summer with a focus on creating jobs and infrastruc­ture projects to help drag the economy out of the coronaviru­s crisis, the Financial Times reported.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak declined on Friday to say if he would bring forward his next budget statement, due in the autumn, to spell out how he will tackle Britain’s surging debt.

But Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government was elected in December after promising to upgrade the country’s creaking infrastruc­ture and the FT said this would form a central part of its recovery programme, along with the retraining of workers.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said England’s lockdown measures will be eased cautiously from Monday
REUTERS Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said England’s lockdown measures will be eased cautiously from Monday

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