Coronavirus: ‘London must enter tier 3 now’ warn experts

Coronavirus

Coronavirus

Coronavirus London should be placed in tier three “now” to avoid a spike in deaths over Christmas, experts have warned.

The city saw a spike in Covid-19 cases at the end of England-wide lockdown on 2 December, new figures have revealed.

Government officials are due to meet on 16 December to review what tier each area should be allocated.

Prof John Ashton, author of Blinded by Corona, said “if London doesn’t want hospitals to be full over Christmas the government need to get a grip today”.

“Deaths will start going up during the Christmas period and new year unless something is done,” said Prof Ashton, a former regional director of public health for north-west England.

“London could become a super spreader, sending coronavirus to other parts of the country over Christmas and making a third wave of infections likely in January.

“London always gets treated differently from the rest of the country because that is where parliament is and where a lot of the business community is.”

PHE data shows 21 of London’s 32 boroughs have infection rates higher than the overall rate for England of 150 cases per 100,000 people.

Taken together, London’s outer boroughs have an infection rate of 205 cases per 100,000 – higher than the current rate in Leicestershire, Tees Valley or Bristol, all of which are in tier three restrictions.

Havering, in east London, has a rate at 362 per 100,000.

From 23 December lockdown restriction will be eased to allow up to three households to meet up for five days over Christmas.

People can mix in homes, places of worship and outdoor spaces, and travel restrictions will also be eased.

“The risks associated with Christmas are huge, even without this rise,” Dr Mike Gill, former regional director of public health for the south-east region, said.

“People should take steps to vastly reduce their contact. A tier-three lockdown will contribute to this very significantly.

“Otherwise you will see hospital admissions rise, and we know that a proportion of those who are hospitalised die.

“We need lockdowns because there has been complete failure to get a robust suppression strategy through track and trace.”

Source – https://news.sky.com/

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