Los Angeles Times

Britain sees medical system ‘ stretched to the limit’

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LONDON — British hospitals are canceling nonurgent procedures and scrambling to f ind space for COVID- 19 patients as coronaviru­s cases continue to surge despite tough new restrictio­ns imposed to curb a fast- spreading variant of the virus.

An additional 41,385 conf irmed cases were recorded across Britain on Monday. It was the f irst time the daily number of cases reported in the country surpassed 40,000, although many more tests are being performed than earlier in the pandemic.

Dr. Nick Scriven, immediate past president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said the rising number of hospitaliz­ed patients was “extremely worrying.”

“With the numbers approachin­g the peaks from April, systems will again be stretched to the limit,” he said.

Authoritie­s are blaming a new variant of the coronaviru­s for soaring infection rates in London and southeast England. They say the new version is more easily transmitte­d than the original, but emphasize there is no evidence it makes people sicker.

In response, authoritie­s have put a swath of England that’s home to 24 million people under restrictio­ns that require nonessenti­al shops to close, bar indoor socializin­g and allow restaurant­s and pubs to operate only for takeout.

Even so, hospital admissions for COVID- 19 in southeast England are approachin­g or exceeding the levels seen at the f irst peak of the outbreak. Government f igures show 21,286 people were hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s across Britain on Dec. 22, the last day for which data are available. That is slightly below the high of 21,683 COVID- 19 patients who were recorded in British hospitals on April 12.

Dr. Katherine Henderson, president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, described her experience working in a hospital on Christmas Day as “wall- towall COVID.”

“The chances are that we will cope, but we cope at a cost,” Henderson told the BBC. “The cost is not doing what we had hoped, which is being able to keep nonCOVID activities going.”

Britain has reported more than 71,000 deaths among people with the coronaviru­s, one of the highest tolls in Europe. A further 357 deaths were reported Monday.

Cabinet Minister Michael Gove said more parts of England might have to be put into the toughest tier of restrictio­ns if case numbers do not fall. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland also have implemente­d strong lockdown measures.

Still, there is confidence help could soon be on the way, with expectatio­n mounting that regulators may authorize a second vaccine this week.

British media reports say the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency is likely to give the green light to a vaccine made by AstraZenec­a and Oxford University.

The regulator authorized a vaccine made by U. S. pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer and German firm BioNTech on Dec. 2, making Britain the f irst country to gain access to a rigorously tested vaccine.

If the AstraZenec­aOxford vaccine is authorized this week, members of the public could start receiving it from Jan. 4. Britain has ordered 100 million doses, compared with 40 million doses of the Pfizer- BioNTech shot.

The AstraZenec­a- Oxford vaccine is considered a potential game- changer in global immunizati­on efforts because it is less expensive than the Pfizer shot and does not need to be stored at freezer temperatur­es, making it easier to distribute.

But it had less clear- cut results from clinical trials than its main rivals. Partial results suggest that the shot is about 70% effective for preventing illness from coronaviru­s infection, compared with the 95% efficacy reported for the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine.

But the trials produced two different results based on the dosing regimen used. Researcher­s said the vaccine protected against disease in 62% of those given two full doses and in 90% of those given a half dose followed by a full dose. However, the second group included only 2,741 people — too few to be conclusive.

AstraZenec­a Chief Executive Pascal Soriot told the Sunday Times newspaper that he was confident the vaccine would work against the new strain and would prove as effective as its rivals.

“We think we have f igured out the winning formula and how to get efficacy that, after two doses, is up there with everybody else,” Soriot said.

 ?? Hollie Adams Getty I mages ?? PARAMEDICS wheel a stretcher outside the Royal London Hospital on Sunday. The number of coronaviru­s infections is soaring in Britain, with 41,385 newly confirmed cases being recorded in the country Monday.
Hollie Adams Getty I mages PARAMEDICS wheel a stretcher outside the Royal London Hospital on Sunday. The number of coronaviru­s infections is soaring in Britain, with 41,385 newly confirmed cases being recorded in the country Monday.

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