Coronavirus news: England hospital admissions up nearly one-quarter in a day, as MPs back 'rule of six'
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Your support makes all the difference.The number of people admitted to English hospitals with coronavirus leapt by nearly one-quarter from Saturday to Sunday, government figures revealed.
There were 478 admissions on Sunday, the most recent day for which figures have been provided, up from 386 the day before.
Meanwhile, Boris Johnson has won a Commons vote on the “rule of six”, despite anger at the government’s ability to bypass parliamentary scrutiny during the pandemic. MPs voted in favour by 287 votes to 17 – but 12 Tories rebelled and voted against the regulation.
Growing frustration with restrictions on freedom comes at a time when some experts are warning those crackdowns may have to become more stringent.
Speaking on BBC Newsnight on Tuesday, Professor John Edmunds said a return to national lockdown should come sooner rather than later.
The Sage adviser said: "We are starting to get to a point where we really will have to take really critical action otherwise we are going to run the risk of turning the National Health Service back into the national Covid service.
"These local restrictions that have been put in place in much of the north of England really haven't been very effective. We need to take much more stringent measures, not just in the north of England, we need to do it countrywide, and bring the epidemic back under control."
He was speaking after it became likely that new a local lockdown would be imposed in Nottingham, where the director of public health described a spike in cases as “significant and worrying”.
In the US, Donald Trump has continued to downplay the dangers of Covid-19, despite contracting it himself. He also called an abrupt halt to negotiations with Democrats on badly-needed new economic stimulus.
Hancock ‘should be considering his position’, Labour’s deputy leader says
Labour’s deputy leader has said health secretary Matt Hancock “should be considering his position” after an IT error led to thousands of coronavirus cases going unreported.
Angela Rayner told Sky News that Mr Hancock should be “embarrassed” over the crisis and argued there had been failures across the government during the pandemic.
“If I was him [Mr Hancock] I would be completely embarrassed by the failures I have overseen because it’s not just the failure of these 15/16,000 tests that were dropped off an Excel spreadsheet,” Ms Rayner said.
“We were told that we would have a world-beating system in place - that’s not been the case.
“We were told that the test results would come back within 24 hours - that’s a failure, that’s not been the case.
“The tracing, we were told by Sage, has to be 80 per cent in order for it to be effective - we’re going backwards on that - so really it’s not just one failure, it’s catastrophic.”
Further restrictions could be needed to keep virus under control, expert says
Further restrictions, such as the closure of bars and restaurants, could be needed to keep coronavirus under control while schools and universities remain open, an expert has warned.
Professor Neil Ferguson, who used to contribute to the government’s scientific advisory group, said the most important measures were those which reduced contacts between households.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that there needed to be some way to reduce contacts with schools and universities open, with possible measures including an “extended half term” or closing hospitality venues.
“We are in a more difficult position, if we want to keep schools open we have to reduce contacts in other areas of society by more,” Professor Ferguson, of Imperial College London, said.
“You will have heard measures being discussed across society as a whole such as extended half terms where we try to reduce transmission for a concerted period.
“I think those measures should be considered.”
The epidemiologist, whose modelling influenced the original nationwide lockdown, added that closing bars and restaurants should be considered in “hotspot” areas where case numbers are increasing.
However, he said the risk from meeting people outside was low so long as people are “sensible”.
“I think the risk really comes from meeting indoors, in enclosed environments,” he told the BBC.
“Of course, as the weather gets colder, meeting outdoors is less appealing, people obviously do want to meet indoors but that's where transmission happens unfortunately.”
Coronavirus deaths rise for third week in a row in England and Wales
The number of weekly coronavirus-related deaths in England and Wales has risen for the third week in a row, according to official figures.
Data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed a total of 215 deaths where Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate recorded in the week to 25 September.
Our reporter, Liam James, has more on this breaking story below:
Coronavirus deaths rise for third week in a row in England and Wales
The latest breaking news, comment and features from The Independent.
More details from the ONS’ latest report on coronavirus-related deaths can be found below:
More hospitality redundancies expected in October, trade body boss warns
The boss of the trade body UKHospitality has told MPs that more redundancies are expected in October as a “large part of the hospitality industry is still in stasis” due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“The Covid second wave and restrictions are not hitting all sectors equally so [we] need to make sure that we have sector-specific support,” Kate Nicholls said.
“We still have 900,000 hospitality workers on full furlough and 400,000 on part-time furlough.
“We fear that unless there are amendments for those areas which are particularly hit, you won't avoid the cliff edge in October and we have got large numbers of redundancies that are forecast in October because of how the jobs support scheme is set up.”
Ms Nicholls added that there was a “very real danger” of losing large chunks of the UK economy during the pandemic.
“In hospitality we will have insolvent businesses, businesses going into administration and therefore that engine of growth for re-employing people will be lost for good,” she said.
“I think that's what we need to be focusing on to make sure we support viable jobs for the future.
“In our sector, those on full-time and part-time furlough are in viable jobs.”
Majority of students ‘well looked-after’ during self-isolation, UniversitiesUK president says
The majority of university students are being “looked after extremely well” following a number of coronavirus outbreaks in halls and campuses since the start of the new term, the president of UniversitiesUK has said.
Professor Julia Buckingham said she was sure there were cases “where things haven't gone quite as well as we would have hoped” but insisted the vast majority of students were being well-supported.
Our reporter, Zoe Tidman, has the full story below:
Most students ‘well looked-after’ during self-isolation, says UniversitiesUK boss
Professor Julia Buckingham says she is ‘confident’ support is in place for many
Coronavirus vaccine should go to older people first, expert says
A coronavirus vaccine will not offer a “sudden and complete solution” to the pandemic but is likely to be given to older people first, a government adviser has said.
The University of Bristol’s Professor Adam Finn, who is a member of the advisory joint committee on vaccination and immunisation (JCVI), said the evidence showed that the jab should be first given to older people, carers and those who are vulnerable, before other considerations such as people's occupations were looked at.
Professor Finn told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the JCVI had warned producing a vaccine and vaccinating people was going to “take a while”.
“People should not imagine that there's going to be a sudden and complete solution,” he said.
“These early vaccines I hope will work to some extent, but there are lots of different vaccines, and they will not all work equally effectively.
“So it's going to be a long drawn-out process getting this right.”
He added that vaccine trials would show if the treatment could stop people getting seriously ill but evidence on the effectiveness at stopping transmission altogether would come later on.
Professor Finn said it was difficult “to find out whether a vaccine blocks transmission until you implement it”, adding that “with most of the programmes in the past, this is something we found after we've started using the vaccine”.
Our reporter, Rory Sullivan, has more details below on Professor Neil Ferguson’s warning over potential further coronavirus restrictions:
Further lockdown restrictions may be needed to prevent NHS being overwhelmed by second wave, Neil Ferguson warns
Epidemiologist says reducing contact between different households most important measure
Pandemic highlights gap between funding and demand for NHS, senior official says
The coronavirus pandemic has highlighted the gap between funding and demand in the National Health Service, the chief executive of NHS Providers has said.
Chris Hopson told the Cheltenham Literature Festival that a funding squeeze and an increase in demand had led to NHS staff being asked to work even harder in recent years, with the current situation described as unsustainable in the long term.
“There's been quite a long-running debate about funding and there's a pretty clear argument that the NHS has been through the longest and deepest financial squeeze in its history between 2010 and 2018,” Mr Hopson said.
“That means we've simply not been able to grow NHS capacity as fast as we would have liked to in terms of keeping up with the growth in demand because we have an ageing population.”
He noted that the coronavirus crisis was focusing attention on the issues of funding, capacity and the NHS being a treatment service.
“The reality is that, if you want a healthy population, you need to look at the other side of the coin,” Mr Hopson said.
“You actually need to think about what do you do to encourage people to look after their own health and wellbeing.
“How do we encourage people to exercise more, to eat well? How do we ensure that we prevent illness?”
He added: “If you look at how much we spend on those things, compared to how much we spend treating illness, the answer actually is it's a woefully small proportion.”
Johnson: ‘I’ve had more than enough of this disease’
Boris Johnson has used his Conservative Party conference speech to insist that the government is working “night and day to repel” Covid-19.
“I don't know about you, but I have had more than enough of this disease that attacks not only human beings but so many of the greatest things about our country - our pubs, our clubs, our football, our theatre and all the gossipy gregariousness and love of human contact that drives the creativity of our economy,” Mr Johnson told the online conference.
The prime minister also compared the virus to an “alien invader” which the UK needed to fight off.
He added: "After all we have been through it is not enough just to go back to before. We have lost too much, we have mourned too many.
"We have been through too much frustration and hardship just to settle for the status quo and to think that life can go on as before the plague and we will not.
“That is why this government will build back better.”
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