Bristol Post

MORE THAN A MILLION

- Harriet LINE bristolpos­tnews@localworld.co.uk

1-IN-50 PEOPLE IN ENGLAND HAD COVID-19 IN THE LAST WEEK

NUMBER OF DAILY CASES TOPS 60,000 FOR FIRST TIME

ANOTHER 12 DEATHS IN BRISTOL REGION YESTERDAY

CORONAVIRU­S poses an “extraordin­arily high” risk and people must take the stay at home rules seriously, England’s chief medical officer has warned, as new figures suggested one in 50 had Covid-19 last week.

Professor Chris Whitty said the country faced a “really serious emergency” as he urged people to adhere to the new England-wide lockdown measures, stressing that a “collective effort” was needed to bring cases down.

New figures released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggested 1.1 million people in private households in England had Covid-19 between December 27 and January 2 – equivalent to 2.06% of the population, or one in 50 people.

They came as the number of daily confirmed cases of coronaviru­s in the UK topped 60,000 for the first time, while a further 830 people died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of yesterday.

Twelve of those deaths came from across the Bristol region.

The Government’s latest breakdown of data shows six deaths were confirmed in North Somerset.

Four fatalities were reported in Bristol, Bath and North East Somerset recorded one death, as did South Gloucester­shire.

Meanwhile, infections across Bristol and its neighbouri­ng areas soared yesterday by 589.

Our city saw the biggest jump of 246 cases. This has brought our Covid rate per 100,000 to 341.4 – double compared to our rate in mid-December.

The daily rise in cases for each part of the region is recorded below, with the total figure during the pandemic in brackets: » Bath and North East Somerset:

+73 (5,212)

» Bristol: +246 (20,118)

» North Somerset: +88 (6,342)

» South Gloucester­shire: +182 (9,392)

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that he had “no choice” but to plunge England into a third national lockdown in light of the figures, with the number of people in hospital with the virus in England higher than ever.

The latest data from NHS England showed there were 26,467 Covid-19 patients in hospital as of 8am on January 5 – a week-onweek increase of 21%. In London, the number stood at a record 6,816 patients, up 27% in a week.

Professor Whitty, speaking in Downing Street yesterday evening, said that because of the spike in people being admitted to hospital there will “inevitably” be an increase in the number of coronaviru­s deaths later this month.

And he told the press conference: “If we did not do all the things all of us must now do, if people don’t take the stay at home seriously, the risk at this point in time, in the middle of winter with this new variant, is extraordin­arily high.”

He said the risk level will gradually decrease over time with measures being “lifted by degrees possibly at different rates in different parts of the country, we’ll have to see”, but said some restrictio­ns may have to be introduced again next winter.

In a televised address on Monday, Mr Johnson announced stringent new controls – including closing schools to most pupils – in an attempt to prevent the NHS being overwhelme­d by a surge in new infections.

The Prime Minister also said a plan to vaccinate 13 million of the most vulnerable people by midFebruar­y could enable restrictio­ns to be progressiv­ely eased from next month.

Mr Johnson told the press conference yesterday that, so far, more than 1.3 million people have been vaccinated against Covid-19 across the UK, including 23% of all the over 80s in England.

He also vowed to give daily updates on the vaccine rollout from Monday.

Prof Whitty said the vaccine timetable was “realistic but not easy”, and that the NHS would have to use “multiple channels” to get it out.

He also said it was important to follow the recommenda­tions on vaccine ordering by the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on, despite pressure for teachers to be given greater priority.

“The reason for that is that that ordering means that we will have the maximum impact on the disease because the people that are by far the highest risk of dying will be vaccinated first,” he explained.

Chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said it was possible the South African coronaviru­s variant may have some impact on vaccine effectiven­ess but is unlikely to “abolish” their effect.

He told the press conference that a possible change in the virus shape in the variant “theoretica­lly gives it a bit more risk of not being recognised” by the immune system.

Sir Patrick said there was “nothing yet to suggest that’s the case” and that “the most likely thing is that this wouldn’t abolish vaccine effect” though it “may have some overall effect on efficacy but we don’t know”.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ■ 60,000 daily infections – new high
■ 1 in 50 in England has virus
■ 1 million infected
■ C19 hospital cases 40% higher than 1st peak
■ 1.3 million vaccinated
■ 1,000 vaccinatio­n sites by end of week
Chief Medical Officer for England, Chris Whitty at yesterday’s news conference inside 10 Downing Street
■ 60,000 daily infections – new high ■ 1 in 50 in England has virus ■ 1 million infected ■ C19 hospital cases 40% higher than 1st peak ■ 1.3 million vaccinated ■ 1,000 vaccinatio­n sites by end of week Chief Medical Officer for England, Chris Whitty at yesterday’s news conference inside 10 Downing Street
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