Western Mail

‘Jabs giving false sense of security’ – experts

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THE UK’s vaccinatio­n programme is offering a “false sense of security” amid a mounting third wave of infections, according to government advisers who have called for this month’s planned unlocking in England to be delayed.

Professor Ravi Gupta, a member of the New and Emerging Respirator­y Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag), said that with the UK in the grip of an “early” third wave of Covid-19 infections, ministers should consider pushing back their target of scrapping all Covid measures on June 21 “by a few weeks”.

The University of Cambridge academic said there had been an “exponentia­l growth” in the number of cases, fuelled by the more transmissi­ble Indian variant, but that the “explosive” impact it could have was currently being masked by the high vaccinatio­n rate.

More than 39 million people have been given a first jab and a further 25.3 million have had both doses.

It comes as NHS chiefs warned that the lockdown-induced backlog of treatments for illnesses other than Covid mean that even a small increase in the number of coronaviru­s patients could cause hospitals to be overstretc­hed once again.

When asked about the possibilit­y of a delay to freedom from restrictio­ns, Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice said nothing could be ruled out.

With both deaths and cases up significan­tly in the past week, experts are urging the Prime Minister to keep to his “data not dates” approach to easing lockdown.

Between May 24 and 30 there were 60 deaths reported within 28 days of a positive coronaviru­s test, an increase of 42.9% compared with the previous seven days.

Sunday also saw a further 3,240 lab-confirmed cases in the UK, with the number of cases between May 24 and May 30 – 22,474 – 26.8% higher than the previous seven days.

Prof Gupta told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “It will probably take longer than earlier waves to emerge because of the fact that we do have quite high levels of vaccinatio­n in the population, so there may be a false sense of security for some time, and that’s our concern.

“I think the problem is we are not too far from reaching the sort of levels of vaccinatio­n that would help us contain the virus and I think that people are not saying we should abandon the June 21 date altogether but just to delay it by a few weeks.”

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