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Covid news - live: UK orders 5 million doses of Moderna vaccine as Hancock refuses to promise pay rise for NHS

Follow the the latest developments

Kate Ng,Rory Sullivan
Monday 16 November 2020 19:20 GMT
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Hancock: NHS will have 40 'long-Covid' centres in place by end of month

The UK has bought 5 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine developed by the US-led biotech firm Moderna, hours after the company reported promising results in its ongoing trial. 

The company’s coronavirus vaccine candidate has been shown to be more than 90 per cent effective in preventing disease among infected individuals.

Interim results from Moderna’s ongoing phase three study returned an efficacy rate of 94.5 per cent, which British scientists have hailed as “tremendously exciting” news.

Meanwhile, clinical trials of a new potential coronavirus vaccine developed by Janssen, part of Johnson &Johnson, are set to begin in the UK, with 6,000 volunteers from across the country taking part.

The Scottish Government could place Glasgow and parts of the west of Scotland under the toughest restrictions in an effort to lower the “stable but stubbornly high” prevalence of the virus.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said a “final decision” will be announced on Tuesday. If placed under the highest level of restrictions, these areas would have to close hospitality, non-essential shops and gyms, as well as a ban on all contact between households.

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EMA starts real-time review of Modern’s Covid vaccine candidate

The European Medicines Agency said on Monday it had started a real-time review of Modern Inc’s candidate for a coronavirus vaccine, following similar such review launches for vaccines from AstraZeneca and Pfizer.

The health regulator said its human medicines committee started a “rolling review” for Modern’s mRNA-1273 vaccine candidate and has already started evaluating the first batch of data.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 12:10
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Moderna vaccine candidate is ’94.5% effective’, according to interim data

Early data from US firm Moderna has suggested its vaccine is highly effective in preventing people getting ill and also works across all age groups.

The latest vaccine news has been hailed by British scientists as “tremendously exciting”. However, the UK has not placed an order for the vaccine and it is yet unclear if the British Government can get any stock.

My colleague Samuel Lovett has the story:

Moderna coronavirus vaccine is 94% effective, early data suggests - but UK has ordered no doses

Moderna expects to provide between 500 million and one billion doses throughout 2021

Kate Ng16 November 2020 12:03
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Military would ‘certainly have a role’ in roll-out of Covid vaccine, says Defence Secretary

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has said the military would be involved in the logistics of rolling out a Covid-19 vaccine throughout the country once it has been approved.

Speaking during a visit at the Exhibition Centre Liverpool, which is being used as a testing site, he said he expected injections to be delivered by NHS workers but thought the Army may be involved in transporting vaccines.

“I should think the Army will be involved in the logistics, I should think the Army will be involved in some of the planning and the command and control which goes on behind the scenes for all these events because I think that is the key,” he said.

“If necessary the armed forces and RAF will be involved in bringing vaccines in the country.”

The Army will continue assisting with a mass coronavirus testing pilot in Liverpool for “as long as it is needed”, he added.

Mr Wallace said the roll-out of the testing pilot has been “good” and the soldiers have been “welcomed” by people in Liverpool.

“We’d like for more people to come but some of that is a challenge for ourselves about, do we move or shift and go to other parts of other communities where we’re not seeing a high uptake, or do we do more to publicise it, and I think that’s a role for both public health and local authority to do alongside, but it’s going in the right direction,” he said.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 11:50
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Owner of All Bar One and Toby Carvery to axe 20 pubs and restaurants

All Bar One
All Bar One (Shutterstock)

Mitchells & Butlers, which owns All Bar One and Toby Carvery, has said it will close down up to 20 of its pubs and restaurants as a result of coronavirus restrictions.

The company confirmed the decision, which will put scores of jobs at risk after sales slumped as lockdown forced sites to close temporarily.

A spokesperson said: “As announced in September, M&B re-opened the vast majority of its estate, approximately 95 per cent after the first lockdown ended.

“The remaining sites have been under review on a case-by-case basis since, taking into account factors such as expected footfall and business layout.

“We have taken the difficult decision not to reopen some of these sites and are working with leaseholders on next steps.”

The pub and bar group did not disclose how many jobs would be impacted as a result of the closures.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 11:30
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Five Tory MPs now self-isolating after meeting at No10

At least five Tory MPs, including the prime minister, are now self-isolating following a meeting in Downing Street last week.

Boris Johnson announced on Sunday he was told to self-isolate by NHS Test and Trace after holding a face-to-face meeting with backbench MPs, including Ashfield MP Lee Anderson, who later tested positive for Covid-19.

Three more MPs, Lia Nici of Great Grimsby, Brendan Clarke-Smith of Bassetlaw, and Andy Carter of Warrington South, have said they too have gone into self-isolation as they were in attendance of the meeting.

Our Political Editor Andrew Woodcock reports:

Five Tory MPs, including Boris Johnson, now self-isolating after meeting at No 10

At least five Conservative MPs, including Boris Johnson, are now self-isolating following a meeting in Downing Street last week.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 11:12
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Matt Hancock defends Covid contracts

The Health Secretary has defended the “extraordinary broad range of companies” employed by the Government during the pandemic.

Matt Hancock was asked about a Sunday Times report which said the Government had awarded £1.5bn to companies linked to the Tory party.

He said the government “had” to work with the private sector, and likened the Covid-19 testing programme to “building something that’s basically about the same size of Tesco in six months”.

Mr Hancock also suggested the story was not a “fair or accurate reflection” of the awarding of contracts, telling Times Radio that many of the companies had not been working with the government before “because we haven’t had a pandemic of this scale before”.

“So think about the testing capacity. It’s nothing to do with any political links, it’s all about building a massive testing capacity in this country that we haven’t had in the past,” he said.

“And the need to do that at pace and build this half a million testing capacity that we have today. We built that almost from scratch.”

He insisted that politics were “completely put aside” during the pandemic.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 11:08
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Gareth Southgate at centre of row with Piers Morgan following positive coronavirus test

Gareth Southgate has found himself at the centre of a surprise row with broadcaster Piers Morgan, and has been challenged to confirm when he tested positive for Covid-19.

The England manager confirmed on Sunday night that he tested positive for coronavirus towards the end of October. He self-isolated for 10 days in between international games.

The positive result was kept confidential by Southgate and the Football Association as the isolation did not impact his commitments, but he confirmed it following the Nations League defeat by Belgium.

Our Sports Correspondent Jack de Menezes has the full story:

Gareth Southgate at centre of row with Piers Morgan over positive coronavirus test

England manager is understood to have tested positive around the 25 October, three days other he spoke to Morgan and others at the GQ Heroes event, before isolating without alerting those who were in attendance

Kate Ng16 November 2020 10:46
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Belgium authorities ‘abandoned’ elderly people in nursing homes during pandemic - report

Amnesty International has said that elderly people in nursing homes in Belgium were failed by the government during the coronavirus pandemic, describing the situation as “human rights violations”.

In a report following an investigation, Amnesty International said “a staggering” 61.3 per cent of all Covid-19 deaths in Belgium took place in nursing homes.

Belgium reported more than 531,000 positive cases of Covid-19 and more than 14,400 deaths linked to the virus. In the first wave of the pandemic in spring, majority of Belgium’s Covid-19-related deaths were recorded in nursing homes.

The organisation said authorities were not quick enough to implement measures to protect residents and staff of nursing homes, failing to protect their human rights.

Kate Ng16 November 2020 10:15
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‘Too early’ to say if lockdown measures will end after 2 December

Matt Hancock has said it was “too early” to determine if current national lockdown measures in England would end as planned on 2 December.

Asked if lockdown would simply be “rebadged” after the deadline, he told the Today programme: “You tempt me, but it is too early to say, I’m afraid.

“We’ve seen in the last week that there is still a very high number of cases but we do absolutely want to come out of this national lockdown.

“That is our goal, everybody has a part to play in making that happen of course, following the social distancing rules and isolating when you need to, which is the critical thing.”

Kate Ng16 November 2020 10:00
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4-year-old boy loses both parents to Covid-19 within 100 days

A young boy in Texas has lost both his parents within 100 days from coronavirus.

Now, his family are trying to plan an unforgettable birthday for him in spite of the grief.

Raiden Gonzalez, four, lost his father in June and his mother in October. His grandmother, Rosie Salinas, told NBC News that Raiden missed his mother and said: “Just this morning he told me that he wishes he had his mom back and he just wanted her back.”

Chelsea Ritschel reports on how the family are planning to celebrate Raiden’s birthday:

4-year-old boy loses both parents to coronavirus within 100 days

Child’s grandmother says it’s a ‘hard situation to process’

Kate Ng16 November 2020 09:45

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