Western Mail

NHS frontline staff ‘stretched to limit’

- CLAIRE HAYHURST, ADAM HALE and ROD MINCHIN newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE impact of the new strain of Covid-19 on the NHS in Wales will be “profound” if cases continue to rise unchecked, the First Minister has said.

Mark Drakeford said there were just under 1,700 people in Welsh hospitals with Covid symptoms a month ago, but there are now more than 2,300.

“Our critical care units are operating beyond their normal capacity and our NHS and frontline staff are certainly stretched to the limit,” Mr Drakeford told a Welsh Government press conference.

At the end of November, the coronaviru­s rate for Wales was 232 cases per 100,000 people, but this is now 623 cases per 100,000 and rising, he said.

Mr Drakeford also said he wished he could have given “more notice” before bringing forward the country’s lockdown and further cutting back plans to allow families to mix over Christmas.

Mr Drakeford said the decision to impose Wales’ highest level of restrictio­ns, announced just seven hours before they came into force, was “unavoidabl­e” due to how widespread the new Covid strain was.

FIRST Minister Mark Drakeford has said he wished he could have given “more notice” before bringing forward the country’s lockdown and further cutting back plans to allow families to mix over Christmas.

Mr Drakeford said the decision to impose Wales’ highest level of restrictio­ns, announced just seven hours before they came into force, was “unavoidabl­e” due to how widespread the new strain of coronaviru­s was across the country.

His announceme­nt on Saturday evening triggered a rush for lastminute shopping before non-essential retailers were forced to close their doors at midnight, leading to long queues outside supermarke­ts and other retailers.

The planned relaxing of restrictio­ns was also further cut back, meaning only two households can currently meet up on Christmas Day itself in Wales.

At yesterday’s press briefing, the Welsh Labour leader was joined by Wales’ deputy chief medical officer Professor Chris Jones, who said cases with the new strain had more than doubled in a week.

Mr Drakeford said an urgent meeting with the Scottish and Irish first ministers and UK Cabinet minister Michael Gove on Saturday heard “new and worrying informatio­n” about how quickly the new strain was being transmitte­d.

He said: “During Saturday afternoon the Welsh cabinet met and received further informatio­n about the spread of the new variant strain here in Wales, and about the significan­t pressure it is causing in all parts of the NHS.

“As a result, we took unavoidabl­e and immediate action to bring forward Alert Level 4 restrictio­ns and to change the Christmas arrangemen­ts because of this incredibly serious turn that the pandemic has taken here in Wales.

“Of course I wish that we had been able to give everyone more notice of these changes. But in light of the informatio­n we had in front of us, it was imperative to take swift action to prevent further harm and to save lives.”

When asked why prior to Saturday he planned to delay lockdown until December 28, despite there already being evidence of a surge in the virus and increased pressure on the NHS, Mr Drakeford said: “When you have a better sense of the cause, you have a better sense of what actions you need to take”.

At the end of November, the seven-day coronaviru­s rate for Wales was 232 cases per 100,000 people but this is now 623 cases per 100,000 and rising.

The high rates led public health directors in the West Midlands yesterday to issue “urgent advice” saying people who travelled from Wales or a Tier 4 area of England should self-isolate, turn away Christmas Day visitors and “assume” they have the new Covid-19 variant.

Welsh Government figures show that Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, which includes the country’s largest hospital, the University Hospital of Wales, ran out of intensive care beds on Sunday with 41 occupied.

There were just under 1,700 people in Welsh hospitals with coronaviru­s symptoms a month ago, but there are now more than 2,300.

Mr Drakeford said that critical care units were now “operating beyond their normal capacity”, warning that and NHS and frontline staff were being “stretched to the limit”.

Over the weekend, more than 100 deaths were reported by Public Health Wales.

“Unless we can regain the grip on the spread of coronaviru­s, we will undoubtedl­y see more deaths here in Wales,” Mr Drakeford said.

He told the press conference there are more than 600 cases of the new variant in Wales but this is a “almost certainly a significan­t underestim­ation”.

This is because only a proportion of the Welsh tests go to the two Lighthouse Laboratori­es able to detect it, he said.

Mr Drakeford said the Welsh Government will discuss with trade unions to see if “anything can be done” for people including NHS staff who will be working on Christmas Day so they can mix with another household on another day.

Data from the Office for National Statistics’ coronaviru­s infection survey shows the new strain of Covid-19 was present in 28% of samples from Wales in the second week of December.

Prof Jones told the briefing the new strain could be causing up to 60% of coronaviru­s infections in Wales and was now “much more common” across the whole of the country.

But he said it is not believed to cause a more serious illness in patients “at this stage”, and that that it is not believed to affect how Covid19 vaccines work.

 ??  ?? Four days before Christmas and Cardiff’s popular arcades were shut yesterday
Four days before Christmas and Cardiff’s popular arcades were shut yesterday

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