Western Daily Press

‘Uncertain’ winter prompts new jabs call

- AINE FOX Press Associatio­n

THE UK faces an uncertain winter amid the spread of both coronaviru­s and flu and all those eligible for jabs should take up the offer to protect themselves, a health chief has said.

UK Health Security Agency chief executive Dr Jenny Harries said this year’s flu could be “multi-strain” and reiterated that natural immunity is lower after last year’s lockdown saw much lower numbers affected than an average winter.

She said it is difficult to predict what will come with Covid-19 as immunity from vaccines wanes in some older people, but struck an optimistic tone by adding that she believes a winter lockdown is “highly unlikely”.

She told Times Radio: “I think it’s looking positive, but I would never say 100%.”

Asked how worried the public should be about flu this winter, she told Sky’s Trevor Phillips On Sunday: “We should be worried about flu each winter. I think people still don’t realise it can be a fatal disease.

“Recent studies suggest that about 25% of us don’t actually understand that. On average, over the last five years, about 11,000 people have died with flu-related conditions.”

This year will be the first time flu “in any real numbers” and Covid will be around at the same time, she said.

She added: “So the risks of catching both together still remain. And if you do that, then early evidence suggests that you are twice as likely to die from having two together, than just having Covid alone.

“So I think it’s an uncertain winter ahead - that’s not a prediction, it’s an uncertain feature - but we do know that flu cases have been lower in the previous year so immunity and the strain types are a little more uncertain.” Explaining that this year’s flu could be made up of different strains, she said the vaccine being offered this winter season is to protect against four of those. She said: “We’ve got a pretty good array in our toolbox to try and hit whichever one becomes dominant but it could be more than one this year, and people’s immunity will be lower.

“So I think the real trick here is to get vaccinated - in both Covid and flu - but obviously to continue to do those good hygiene behaviours that we’ve been practising all through Covid.”

The average flu season around 11,000 deaths a year.

Dr Harries insisted it is not the case that 120 deaths a day is seen as an “acceptable death rate” for Covid, and said officials are still “taking it extremely seriously”.

She told The Andrew Marr show: “We are starting to move to a situation where, perhaps Covid is not the most significan­t element and many of those individual­s affected will of course have other comorbidit­ies which will make them vulnerable to serious illness for other reasons as well.” She said the “extremely good vaccine uptake” is now preventing “very significan­t amounts of hospitalis­ation and death”, but added that this is now “one of the most difficult times to predict what will come” with coronaviru­s.

She said: “We have different levels of vaccinatio­n, we have a little bit of immunity waning in older individual­s, which is why we’re now starting to put in a Covid booster vaccine.

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