Manawatu Standard

Covid pandemic is over in UK, experts say

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Britain is no longer in a pandemic, experts have said, as new data showed the vaccinatio­n programme is reducing symptomati­c Covid infections by up to 90 per cent.

In the first large real-world study of the impact of vaccinatio­n on the general population, researcher­s found that the rollout is having a major impact on cutting both symptomati­c and asymptomat­ic cases.

Sarah Walker, Professor of Medical Statistics and Epidemiolo­gy at Oxford and Chief Investigat­or on the Office for National Statistics Covid-19 Infection Survey, said that Britain had ‘‘moved from a pandemic to an endemic situation’’ where the virus is circulatin­g at a low, largely controllab­le level in the community.

The new research, based on throat swabs from 373,402 people between December 1 last year and April 3, found three weeks after one dose of either the Pfizer or Astrazenec­a jab, symptomati­c infections fell by 74 per cent and infections without symptoms by 57 per cent. By two doses, asymptomat­ic infections were down 70 per cent and symptomati­c by 90 per cent.

It comes as infections continue to fall in Britain, dropping seven per cent in a week, despite the reopening of schools and shops. Deaths have also fallen by 26 per cent and admissions by 19 per cent over the last seven days.

New data from the ONS also showed that Covid was no longer the leading cause of death in March, falling behind dementia and heart disease, for the first time since October.

Walker said she was hopeful the vaccinatio­n programme could keep Covid under control.

‘‘I am cautiously optimistic,’’ she said at a briefing discussing the new research. ‘‘I think the last three months have shown the combined effect of lockdown and vaccinatio­n but long term lockdown is not a viable solution, so vaccines are clearly going to be the only way that we are going to have a chance to control this long term.

‘‘Without vaccines, I don’t think getting close to zero is really feasible in the situation now in the UK where we’re effectivel­y endemic, we’ve moved from a pandemic to an endemic situation.’’

But she warned ‘‘‘the virus is always going to throw us curve balls and we’re only a small step away from things going wrong again’’.

Commenting on the new research, which was a collaborat­ion between Oxford, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and the Department of Health, Matt Hancock, the health secretary, said: ‘‘Vaccines work, and Thursday’s findings provide further evidence that both the Pfizer and Astrazenec­a vaccines are having a significan­t impact on reducing infections across the UK.’’

New figures from the King’s College ZOE symptom tracker app, which has been recording swab data and reported symptoms since the start of the pandemic, also reported a decline in cases by 28 per cent since last week.

The team now expects infections will fall below 1000 per day in the coming week, close to the record lows of August, and say variants are currently not causing problems.

Tim Spector, Professor of Genetic Epidemiolo­gy at King’s College London, and lead scientists on the app, told The Telegraph

‘‘With the low levels over the past few weeks and with the data from the ZOE app and the other surveys aligned, we are in a

‘‘I am cautiously optimistic. I think the last three months have shown the combined effect of lockdown and vaccinatio­n but long term lockdown is not a viable solution, so vaccines are clearly going to be the only way that we are going to have a chance to control this long term.

Sarahwalke­r

Chief Investigat­or on the Office for National Statistics Covid-19 Infection Survey very good position. Added to the fact that infections after vaccinatio­ns are really rare, I would very cautiously say that we could be entering endemic territory, where low levels of infection will be the norm, with occasional minor outbreaks.’’

Last week, Spector said he believed herd immunity was starting to have an impact on cases.

Weekly Public Health England (PHE) data published on Wednesday showed that antibody levels are now around 60.5 per cent from either infection or vaccinatio­n.

‘‘Our actions are helping to reduce the spread of the virus, with case rates falling in every age group. We are moving in the right direction, let’s keep going,’’ Dr Yvonne Doyle, Medical Director at Public Health England, said.

New figures from The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) estimate that by the time of the next roadmap milestone on May 17, when indoor hospitalit­y can reopen, cases will be down to just 600 a day and hospital admissions below 50 a day – a similar level to early July last year.

Commenting on the Oxford data, Health Minister Lord Bethell added: ‘‘These real-world findings are extremely promising and show our historic vaccinatio­n programme is having a significan­t impact across the UK by reducing infections among people of all ages, including those with underlying health conditions’’.

 ?? AP ?? The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, visits the National Covid Memorial Wall in London.
AP The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, visits the National Covid Memorial Wall in London.

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