The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Leader vows to use‘ every second’ to vaccinate vulnerable

- By Danica Kirka

Prime Minister Boris Johnson pledged his government would use “every available second” to shield the vulnerable.

LONDON » U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson pledged that his government would use “every available second” to shield the elderly and the vulnerable from the virus rampaging across Britain as he told Parliament on Wednesday why the country needed to return to a COVID-19 lockdown.

Lawmakers were recalled from their Christmas recess to discuss the measures, which came into force at midnight. Despite some grumbling, they voted 524-16 to approve England’s third national lockdown because there is a wide consensus on the need for tougher restrictio­ns to control soaring new infections.

“When the Office for National Statistics reports that more than 2% of the population is now infected, and when the number of patients in hospitals in England is now 40% higher than the first peak in April, it is inescapabl­e that the facts are changing, and we must change our response,” Johnson said.

He said “we will use every available second of the lockdown to place this invisible shield around the elderly and the vulnerable” until vaccinatio­n provides a “means of escape” from lockdown.

The U.K. is in a maelstrom of rising COVID-19 infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths. Britain reported more than 60,000 new confirmed cases in 24 hours for the second day in a row on Wednesday. Authoritie­s said more than 403,914 people had tested positive in the past seven days, a 43% increase from the previous week.

Rising infections are also putting an unpreceden­ted strain on the nation’s healthcare system. Hospitals in the U.K. are treating 30,451 coronaviru­s patients, well over 40% more than during the pandemic’s first peak in April.

Authoritie­s reported 1,041 deaths on Wednesday, the highest since April 21. Hospitals are jammed with COVID-19 patients and medical personnel, many of whom are exhausted after months of dealing with the virus, find themselves stretched thin. The situation is dire.

“We’ve got these unpreceden­ted numbers of patients coming in with COVID,” said Dr. Tom Dolphin, a member of the British Medical Associatio­n council who works in London. “And we probably haven’t seen the peak yet from the patients coming in who got infected during Christmas and the new year period.”

When Johnson on Monday announced the stay-athome order and the nationwide closure of gyms, pubs, restaurant­s and nonessenti­al shops, he said the lockdown terms would remain in place until mid-February. By that time, the government hopes to have given one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine to about 13 million people who are most at risk — including everyone in the country over age 70 — and the progress may potentiall­y allowing some relaxation of the restrictio­ns.

“After the marathon of last year, we are indeed now in a sprint, a race to vaccinate the vulnerable faster than the virus can reach them, and every needle in every arm makes a difference,” Johnson told the House of Commons on Wednesday.

The session came amid anger over the chaos in the government’s education strategy during the pandemic.

As part of the latest lockdown, Johnson ordered schools across England to close, backtracki­ng on the government’s pledge to keep them open. Some lawmakers are seeking assurances that schools will reopen in mid-February.

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