Derby Telegraph

Test and travel rules eased but ‘Plan B still best’

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BORIS Johnson has insisted he was right to stick with England’s Plan B coronaviru­s measures despite rapidly rising hospital admissions, soaring case rates and staff shortages hitting the NHS.

The Prime Minister told MPs the Cabinet had agreed to keep the existing domestic restrictio­ns but eased travel testing rules.

He also confirmed plans being implemente­d across the UK to end the requiremen­t for confirmato­ry PCR tests for asymptomat­ic people who test positive using a lateral flow device (LFD).

An estimated 3.7 million people in the UK had Covid-19 in the week ending December 31, up from 2.3 million in the week to December 23 and the highest number since comparable figures began in autumn 2020, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.

In England around one in 15 people in private households had Covid-19, according to ONS estimates - a level rising to one in 10 in London.

NHS England figures showed 15,659 people were in hospital with Covid-19 yesterday morning, an increase of 615 on 24 hours earlier, although the number of patients requiring mechanical ventilatio­n was down 28 to 769.

In the Commons, Mr Johnson said hospital admissions were “doubling around every nine days” and “we’re experienci­ng the fastest growth in Covid cases we’ve ever known”.

Cases were doubling every week among the over-60s, he added.

But he said the Plan B measures - including wider use of face masks and guidance to work from home - were “helping to take the edge off the Omicron wave”, slowing the spread, easing pressure on the NHS and buying time for the booster campaign to take effect. He said Plan B and the testing changes were “balanced and proportion­ate ways of ensuring we can live with Covid without letting our guard down”.

The restrictio­ns will be reviewed again before they are scheduled to expire on January 26.

The changes in testing procedures are aimed at freeing up laboratory capacity for PCR tests, with the requiremen­t for confirmato­ry tests suspended in asymptomat­ic people until the current high levels of infections subside. The change was being introduced in Northern Ireland on Wednesday, Scotland and Wales on Thursday and in England from January 11.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said while levels of Covid-19 are high, the “vast majority” of people with positive LFD results can be confident they have the virus.

People who have Covid-19 symptoms should still get a PCR test, the UKHSA said.

UKHSA chief executive Dame Jenny Harries said: “While cases of Covid continue to rise, this tried and tested approach means that LFDs can be used confidentl­y to indicate Covid-19 infection without the need for PCR confirmati­on.”

Ministers also approved changes to the travel regime for England, with the requiremen­t for pre-departure tests scrapped from 4am on Friday.

Mr Johnson also said the requiremen­t to self-isolate on arrival until receipt of a negative PCR test on arrival was being scrapped, returning instead to the system in place in October last year, where travellers need to take a lateral flow test no later than the end of day two after arriving in England, with a PCR if they are positive.

In Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon cut the self-isolation period to seven days, as long as people have two negative lateral flow tests, broadly in line with the measures in place in England.

But restrictio­ns on large gatherings and hospitalit­y and leisure businesses will remain until at least January 17 in Scotland, she added.

 ?? ?? Boris Johnson speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons, yesterday
Boris Johnson speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons, yesterday

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