Daily Express

BRITAIN IN GRIP OF KILLER FLU

New fears that the outbreak could be worst for 50 years

- By Michael Knowles

BRITAIN is on the brink of the worst flu epidemic for half a century as a deadly new strain spreads across the country.

The virulent disease could prove as deadly as Hong Kong flu in 1968 which killed a million people worldwide, experts warned yesterday.

The elderly are feared to be most at risk because vaccines are not providing enough protection.

Last night just five areas of the country were free from all strains of the disease – including the feared H3N2 Aussie strain.

The number of people being treated in hospital for flu tripled over the Christmas week. Now it is feared NHS chiefs may be forced to cancel more operations and appointmen­ts to cope with a surge of patients in the coming weeks.

Hospital bosses have so far been forced to delay around 55,000 procedures. Professor Robert Dingwall, from Nottingham Trent University, told the Daily Express yesterday: “The problem with the

new Aussie flu is that the vaccine is not as good as it is for the other strains because it is a new strain.

“By the time the Aussie strain had been identified, this year’s vaccine had already been manufactur­ed.

“We are looking at a flu season that is likely to be worse than last year.

“It is a bit too early to say it could be the worst flu season in a generation. But it could be if the Aussie strain really takes hold.

“Flu is very infectious and once it gets into the country, there’s nothing much you can do about it.

“It might mean the system remains at this intensity for another four to five weeks instead of returning to normal as we would expect. That could mean elective surgery has to be cancelled well into February.”

Public Health England data shows flu-related hospital admissions tripled from 2.33 per 100,000 people to 6.82 between Christmas Eve and New Years Eve. This suggests the number of flu patients in hospital soared from 1,280 to 3,750 in just one week, with 17 said to be in intensive care.

Demand

Fears of fatalities have been growing after the lethal virus claimed its first victims in Ireland. In France at least 30 people have died and 11,500 treated in hospital.

Areas worst hit in the UK include Portsmouth, Plymouth, Dundee, Doncaster, Chelmsford, Northampto­n and Canterbury. But Dorset, Ilford, the City of London and two smaller areas have reported zero cases.

Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said: “Whilst this is currently within seasonally-expected levels, we are also hearing anecdotal reports of increased demand at surgeries.

“We want to reassure patients that the influenza vaccine remains the best protection. It is not too late for patients to receive their vaccinatio­n.”

Aussie flu symptoms include a sore throat and cough, headache, fever, muscle ache, fatigue and sneezing. But some patients have told how they been sick and suffered hallucinat­ions.

With growing concern over delays in emergency treatment, Theresa May was yesterday forced to defend the Government’s record on the NHS, insisting it had “put the money in that was asked for”. But she told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show: “Of course nothing’s perfect and there is more for us to do.”

The admission came after Mr Marr, who survived a stroke in 2013, told her he would have died if he didn’t receive urgent care. He highlighte­d how a woman waited more than five hours to be admitted to Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford, Essex.

He added: “If I’d been waiting for five hours before I’d seen a doctor after my stroke, I would not be here talking to you.

“This is about life and death and up and down the country people are having horrendous experience­s of the NHS.”

WHO’S to blame for the winter crisis affecting the NHS? The easy way out is to pin it on the Government, as TV commentato­r Andrew Marr implied on the BBC yesterday.

He told the Prime Minister that if he’d had his major stroke this winter, instead of in 2013, he might have died.

Life is full of ifs and maybes so it’s as well to consider some facts.

Because of Labour’s open-door immigratio­n policy when it was last in power, the population has grown by more than five million – that’s five more cities the size of Birmingham.

Because Labour did a crazy deal with doctors they got paid more for doing less, so out-of-hours and weekend issues require a trip to Accident & Emergency, putting massive pressure on hospital casualty units.

Can we blame Tory cuts for the crisis then, as Jeremy Corbyn and his cohorts regularly do?

Hardly. When Labour left office in 2010 they spent about £100billion a year on the NHS. Today, Theresa May’s Government is spending £125billion – and rising.

The NHS is struggling to cope this winter because there are too many people demanding treatment as a major flu epidemic sweeps the country.

But don’t expect the Left to let the facts get in the way of point-scoring. It’s time for an honest, adult, non-partisan debate about the NHS’s future.

People are dying while the politicos are lying.

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 ??  ?? More and more patients are falling victim to flu across the country. The areas in green represent those few spots that have held out with no known cases to date
More and more patients are falling victim to flu across the country. The areas in green represent those few spots that have held out with no known cases to date

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