Yorkshire Post

Keep your distance... the rule on two-metre spacing to stay

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR ■ Email: rob.parsons@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RobParsons­YP

THE TWO-METRE social-distancing rule is remaining in place, the Government has said, despite calls from MPs for it to be reduced.

Several MPs, including former Environmen­t Secretary Theresa Villiers, had called for the distance to be reduced, in line with some other countries’ rules, to save jobs and to help the hospitalit­y sector reopen.

Places such as theatres, pubs and entertainm­ent venues could be hit hard by the current twometre ruling, which would severely restrict the number of patrons allowed inside and the staff needed. On May 27, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he had asked members of Sage, the scientific advisory group for emergencie­s, to review the guidance.

However, yesterday Number 10 said the Government believed the two-metre rule should remain in place.

The Prime Minister’s spokesman said: “We continue to keep all these matters under review but the current guidance is that

Kate Thompson, of the Chartered Institute of Environmen­tal Health, yesterday.

the two-metre rule should remain in place.”

It comes after a new study suggested physical distancing of at least one metre lowered the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on but distances of two metres could be more effective.

Researcher­s found that keeping a distance of more than one metre from other people was associated with a much lower risk of infection compared with less than one metre.

The risk of infection when people stand more than a metre away from the infected individual was found to be three per cent and 13 per cent if within a metre.

However, according to the analysis published in The Lancet, modelling suggests for every extra metre further away up to three metres, the risk of infection or transmissi­on may halve. Following the research, the Chartered Institute of Environmen­tal Health stressed the “vital” importance of the two-metre distance as more businesses prepare to open.

The profession­al body, which represents those who work in environmen­tal health roles such as in the food, housing and transport industries, urged the Government to maintain the twometre guidance especially as “riskier” businesses including pubs prepare to open.

The chartered institute’s Wales director Kate Thompson said: “The World Health Organisati­on advice for distances of at least one metre to be maintained, to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s, has led to strong pressure from certain industries to reduce social distancing between individual­s from the current two metres.

“However, this advice was only ever an absolute minimum, rather than a safe distance, and new evidence published today supports this longer distance.”

She added: “Protecting public health and avoiding the possibilit­y of a second peak of infections should be key. It is, therefore, vital that the two-metre rule is not reduced due to pressure from industry.”

Protecting public health and avoiding a second peak should be key.

 ?? PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE ?? STEP OUTSIDE: Head gardener Sam Shipman gets ready for the National Trust’s Beningbrou­gh Hall Gardens to reopen to the public, although all visitors will have had to have booked in advance and the first batch of tickets have already sold out.
PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE STEP OUTSIDE: Head gardener Sam Shipman gets ready for the National Trust’s Beningbrou­gh Hall Gardens to reopen to the public, although all visitors will have had to have booked in advance and the first batch of tickets have already sold out.

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