Western Morning News

Intensive care ‘at risk’ as C19-linked deaths hit 100k

- PA REPORTERS

HOSPITAL intensive care units (ICUs) face being overwhelme­d unless coronaviru­s rates are brought under control, Boris Johnson admitted.

The Prime Minister said there was a “very substantia­l” risk that ICUs would be unable to cope if numbers kept increasing.

Mr Johnson’s stark warning came as the daily reported death toll reached a new high, with 1,564 fatalities recorded within 28 days of a positive test.

The latest figures mean the grim milestone of more than 100,000 deaths involving coronaviru­s has now been passed in the UK, according to official data. The wider definition total is based on the most up-todate statistics for people who had Covid-19 recorded on their death certificat­e, plus deaths known to have occurred more recently. Government figures, which only include those who died within 28 days of testing positive, stands at 84,767.

The Prime Minister told MPs: “If you ask me when do we think that the ICU capacity is likely to be overtopped, I can’t give you a prediction for that.

“But all I can say is that the risk is very substantia­l and we have to keep the pressure off the NHS and the only way to do that is to follow the current lockdown.”

The latest official figures on the coronaviru­s dashboard show more than 36,000 people are in hospital with coronaviru­s, including almost 3,500 on ventilatio­n.

Mr Johnson told the Commons Liaison Committee that “the situation is very, very tough indeed in the NHS” and “the strain is colossal” on staff.

The Prime Minister also acknowledg­ed concerns about a new Brazilian variant of coronaviru­s, although he did not announce a ban on travel from the South American country.

“We already have tough measures... to protect this country from new infections coming in from abroad,” he said.

“We are taking steps to do that in respect of the Brazilian variant.”

Earlier, at Prime Minister’s Questions Mr Johnson said vaccinatio­ns would take place 24/7 as soon as possible, although supply of doses remained the main barrier.

He said the process of protecting people from coronaviru­s is already going “exceptiona­lly fast” but “at the moment the limit is on supply” of the vaccine. “We will be going to 24/7 as soon as we can,” he told MPs.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock will set out further details “in due course”, Mr Johnson said.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said he understood that pilot 24-hour centres were not yet open to the public but there would be a “huge clamour”.

Mr Hancock earlier questioned whether there would be demand for a round-the-clock vaccinatio­n operation as “most people want to get vaccinated in the daytime, and also most people who are doing the vaccinatio­ns want to give them in the daytime”.

More than 2.6 million people across the UK have so far received a first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine.

In Scotland, vaccinatio­ns could begin on a 24-hour schedule when mass centres open in late February or early March, the country’s Health Secretary, Jeane Freeman, said.

The Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine provides the most straightfo­rward route to protect around 15 million of the most vulnerable people by mid-February because it is logistical­ly less complicate­d than the Pfizer jab, which needs to be kept deep-frozen.

Tom Keith-Roach, president at AstraZenec­a UK, said: “We are scaling up very rapidly and this will happen imminently to releasing two million doses a week.” In other developmen­ts:

A national voucher scheme for free school meals in England will relaunch next week after issues with food parcels for children not in class were highlighte­d by campaigner­s including footballer Marcus Rashford and cook Jack Monroe.

Click-and-collect services will largely end in Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced, to “reduce as far as is possible the reasons people have just now for leaving home”.

Care home residents and staff across England are expected to be vaccinated by January 24 at the latest, with the majority of jabs administer­ed by the end of this week.

 ?? @NHSNottsCC­G ?? Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England Jonathan Van Tam (left) assisting with the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme at the Richard Herrod Centre in Nottingham
@NHSNottsCC­G Deputy Chief Medical Officer for England Jonathan Van Tam (left) assisting with the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme at the Richard Herrod Centre in Nottingham

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