Category: Coronavirus

  • Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on USTR’s Statement on Covid-19 Patents

    Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on USTR’s Statement on Covid-19 Patents

    The comments made by Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, on 6 May 2021.

    These proposals from the US are welcome and it is vital that the UK government follows the Biden Administration’s lead and engages constructively to develop a workable plan at the WTO.

    This is an important first step but if we are to deliver the massive global increase in vaccine production that is urgently needed we must also develop a plan to share our expertise, equipment and raw materials, and take action to identify, equip and finance the mass production facilities needed in every region of the globe.

    So alongside today’s discussions, the UK government must begin work with the US and others on a comprehensive international agreement to bring about that step change in production, and replicate the speed, scale and success of the UK and US vaccination programmes in every country in the world.

  • Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Comments on Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccines

    Nadhim Zahawi – 2021 Comments on Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccines

    The comments made by Nadhim Zahawi, the Vaccines Minister, on 28 April 2021.

    We are doing everything we can to make sure the most vulnerable are protected from COVID-19 now and in the future.

    Our brilliant Vaccines Taskforce has secured an extra 60 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines to support our booster programme, which will be developed in line with the advice of our experts.

    In the meantime, we are making great progress with our vaccination rollout and I urge everybody to get their vaccines as soon as they are eligible.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccines

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccines

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 28 April 2021.

    Our vaccination programme is bringing back our freedom, but the biggest risk to that progress is the risk posed by a new variant.

    We’re working on our plans for booster shots, which are the best way to keep us safe and free while we get this disease under control across the whole world.

    These further 60 million doses will be used, alongside others, as part of our booster programme from later this year, so we can protect the progress that we’ve all made.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 28 April 2021.

    Good afternoon and welcome to Downing Street for today’s coronavirus briefing.

    I’m joined by Professor Jonathan Van Tam, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, and Dr Nikki Kanani, the Medical Director for Primary Care at NHS England.

    Today we’ve got an update on our fight against coronavirus, both here at home and around the world.

    Support for India

    I’ll start by talking about events around the world.

    We’ve all seen the harrowing pictures of what’s happening in India.

    I think it pains each one of us who’s seeing those scenes.

    Not least because the bonds between our countries are so strong. And there are ties of family and friendship.

    I’ve been in constant contact with my Indian counterpart.

    And we worked over the weekend to put together our first package of support of ventilators and oxygen concentrators.

    More supplies will be arriving later this week.

    I’ve also been working with the Health Minister for Northern Ireland, Robin Swann, to donate large scale oxygen production equipment from Northern Ireland which is capable of producing over 1,000 litres of oxygen per minute – which is one of the main needs of the people of India.

    I’d like to thank Robin for the incredible hard work he’s done in getting this to the position it is so we can get it sent to India where it can produce that oxygen that is so badly needed.

    Everyone across this whole United Kingdom stands side-by-side with the people of India in these troubled times because in this battle against coronavirus, we’re all on the same side.

    This fight is a global fight.

    And when other nations face their hour of need, as we have faced our hour of need here at home: we’ll be there.

    The situation in India is a stark reminder that this isn’t over yet.

    It shows how important it is that we’re vigilant here at home.

    Professor Van Tam will take us through the data in a moment.

    Transmission data

    Just before we do, I want to give an update on the vaccination programme.

    This morning we published new data, giving the first concrete evidence of how much vaccines reduce transmission within households.

    We’ve seen already that a vaccine reduces your chance of catching COVID by around two thirds.

    This new data looked at people who tested positive after having received one dose of the vaccine and found that they were up to 50 per cent less likely to pass on the disease to someone else in their household.

    And we’re looking at whether the second dose gives an even bigger effect.

    We know that indoor settings have the highest risk of transmission.

    So these results are very encouraging in terms of the impact of the vaccine on reducing transmission.

    We’re finding out more and more about the layers of protection you get from a vaccine, and how its impacting in the real world.

    In summary, we think you get around two thirds protection against catching the disease at all, around four fifths reduction in your likelihood of ending up in hospital and around 85 per cent protection from dying of COVID.

    That’s the protection you get from one dose.

    And in addition to all that, you’re up to half as likely to pass it on to somebody else that you live with.

    We expect the benefits to be even greater after two doses and we are monitoring that carefully.

    What this means is the evidence is stacking up that the vaccine protects you, protects your loved ones, and is the way out of this pandemic.

    Vaccination programme

    The overall effectiveness of the vaccination programme comes from just two things.

    One, how effective the vaccine is – that’s the science if you like.

    And two, how many people get the jabs. That of course is on all of us.

    I just want to turn to the second of those for a moment as well.

    First animation, please.

    This shows the proportion of people who’ve had a jab, according to age group.

    Green bars represent people who’ve had one dose, and the blue represent people who’ve had two.

    And you can see they are growing over time as the vaccination programme reaches more and more people who are younger and younger.

    As you can see, across the United Kingdom, uptake of the first dose among the over 50s is phenomenally high, at over 95 per cent.

    And is rising sharply in people in their late forties who have been now able to receive the vaccine for a couple of weeks.

    This is great progress, and it’s something we can all celebrate, because we all have a part to play in this.

    I’m delighted we’ve been able to offer the vaccine to even more people.

    So anyone who’s 42 or older can now come forward and get the jab.

    I’m delighted about this, not just because it shows the progress we’re making, I’m also delighted because it means I can get my jab too.

    Just like every other 42 and 43 year old, I got a text from the NHS yesterday.

    I went online and booked it for myself. It takes less than a minute.

    And I’m looking forward to getting my jab first thing tomorrow morning.

    In the words of our new campaign “every vaccination brings us hope”.

    Antibody data

    So, we’ve looked at the effectiveness of the vaccine and we’ve looked at the take up of the vaccine.

    And now I want to turn to a combination of the two.

    What I’m about to show you is not how many people have had the jab, but how many people have got the antibodies that make the jab effective. These antibodies that protect you from coronavirus.

    This isn’t a measure of the vaccination programme directly. This is a measure of the protection that we have, collectively, built up in people right across the country.

    Can we have the second chart, please.

    This data, released today by the ONS, is from a national survey where they visit over 20,000 people, and actually measure the antibodies in people’s bloodstream.

    The blue area shows the proportion of people who have COVID-19 antibodies.

    As you can see, in the older age groups who got vaccinated first they are much more likely to have COVID-19 antibodies.

    So more and more people are getting protection.

    And now 7 in 10 adults have protective COVID antibodies. This is the vaccination programme in action.

    It makes me so proud of what we’ve done.

    We have been working on the vaccination programme for more than a year now.

    And there’s a massive team to it, and I’m grateful to them all.

    But the thing that makes me proudest is how, when the call came, the whole nation who has been asked has effectively stepped forward.

    This vaccination programme depends, yes ,on the effectiveness of the science and that is crucial. But it depends on everybody stepping forward.

    Booster programme and Pfizer doses

    The vaccine is helping us to bring back our freedom and we must protect this progress.

    The biggest risk to that progress is the risk posed by a new variant.

    So we’re working on our plans for booster shots too.

    To keep us safe and free here while we get this disease under control across the whole world.

    We’ve been working on a programme of booster shots again for over a year now.

    And we’ve backed some of the only clinical trials in the world looking specifically at booster shots.

    I’m delighted to be able to tell you that we’ve secured a further 60 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

    And that will be used, alongside others, as part of our booster shot programme from later this year.

    And that is all about protecting the progress that we’ve made.

    Conclusion

    We have a clear route out of this crisis.

    But, this is no time for complacency, it’s a time for caution.

    So that we can keep the virus under control, while we take the steps, safely, back to normal life.

    So please remember the basics of hands, face, space, and fresh air.

    And crucially, if like me you get the call, join me and get the jab.

    Now I’d like to hand over to Professor Van Tam to talk through the latest data and then to Dr Kanani to talk through some of the detailed data about that extraordinarily high take up of the vaccine.

    Thank you.

  • James Heappey – 2021 Comments on Getting Vaccines to Overseas Territory of Tristan da Cunha

    James Heappey – 2021 Comments on Getting Vaccines to Overseas Territory of Tristan da Cunha

    The comments made by James Heappey, the Minister for the Armed Forces, on 29 April 2021.

    This operation to transport vaccines to one of the most remote parts of the world, reaffirms our commitment to the people of our Overseas Territories.

    The Armed Forces take great pride in supporting our people, at home or abroad, whenever and wherever needed. I am immensely proud of all Royal Navy and RAF personnel involved in this mission and the role they have played in helping to deliver vaccines to the people of Tristan da Cunha safely and quickly.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2021 Speech on India’s Second Wave Crisis

    Lisa Nandy – 2021 Speech on India’s Second Wave Crisis

    The speech made by Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, in the House of Commons on 28 April 2021.

    Mr Speaker, India is in a Covid crisis of unprecedented proportions.

    We will all have seen the haunting footage of families pleading with doctors to treat their loved ones or queueing to cremate their dead.

    In the last 24 hours, India has once more reported the world’s largest single day total, with more than 360,000 new confirmed cases and more than 3,000 deaths. There have been more than two million cases confirmed in the last week. India now makes up around 40 per cent of all the new cases in the world and experts believe this is almost certainly an underestimate. The peak of this crisis may yet be weeks away.

    This is not just a heart-breaking crisis for India, it is global emergency that has consequences for all of us. We all face the same disease. We are all in this together. We are in a global race between vaccines and variants. No one is safe until we are all safe.

    Mr Speaker, for many of us in Britain, our ties to India are personal. My father came to this country from India, and being half Indian is an important part of who I am. Family ties between our countries are woven into the fabric of this nation. For the more than one million British Indians of different generations, this is a moment of fear and anxiety. So many British Indians will have gone to work today in the NHS, to which they make such a remarkable contribution. They have helped to carry this country through this crisis. Today many will be worried for loved ones, family and friends in India.

    Mr Speaker, just over a year ago, when the UK was facing one of our darkest moments in this pandemic, the Government of India sent 3,000,000 packets of paracetamol to the UK to meet our needs. That was an act of solidarity and support. It is now our turn to help the people of India in this hour of need.

    I’m grateful to the Foreign Secretary for outlining what support the government has already provided.

    I believe we can and must do more. I would be grateful if the Foreign Secretary could assure me the government is exploring all avenues available in the following areas:

    First, Medical supplies: including oxygen, but also empty canisters and cylinders, oxygen concentrators, ventilators; and surplus therapeutic medicine like remdesivir;

    Second, Genomic sequencing and epidemiology: utilising the UK’s world leading capacity in genomic sequence to track potential further mutations and variants in the Indian outbreak.

    Third, Vaccines: we need a much greater effort to ensure we ramp up production and manufacturing capacity and overcome barriers to expanding supply, the greatest challenge we face.

    Fourth, coordination – working with the government of India but also partners in North America and Europe to ensure our contributions have the greatest effect;

    Mr Speaker, this is a time for solidarity and common cause with the people of India. I hope that today we can come together as a House and show that we are doing all we can.

  • Rachel Reeves – 2021 Comments on Ministers with Covid Contract Links

    Rachel Reeves – 2021 Comments on Ministers with Covid Contract Links

    The comments made by Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, on 26 April 2021.

    Under the increasing spread of Tory sleaze, knowing how exposed some of our frontline staff were during the height of the pandemic without proper PPE, but also that Tory friends and donors were being awarded £2 billion worth of contracts creates increasingly serious questions for government.

    The government have long rejected Labour’s call for basic transparency by publishing the VIP fast lane, but this cannot go on given new revelations of corruption risk, and of companies without proper certification being allowed to jump the queue.

    As we are still missing an Independent Advisor on Ministerial Standards, and a Register of Ministers’ Interests, the government must require Ministers to publish openly and with full transparency, communications between them and those businesses who have won contracts since the pandemic begun and emergency procurement was introduced.

    Otherwise it’s increasingly clear that it is one set of rules for Ministers and their close friends, and another for everyone else.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 in India

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 in India

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 26 April 2021.

    Given our deep links with India, the UK cannot remain on the side lines. This pandemic has been a stark reminder of the interconnected nature of our world and the impact events on the other side of the globe can have here in the UK. Nowhere is safe until everywhere safe. The virus and its variants cannot be defeated by the individual efforts of nations alone.

    The crisis reminds us of the power of international collaboration and the importance of standing in solidarity with our global partners in the fight against this disease.

  • Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 in India

    Lisa Nandy – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 in India

    The comments made by Lisa Nandy, the Foreign Secretary, on 26 April 2021.

    Defeating this virus anywhere means defeating it everywhere. We have seen how quickly COVID-19 variants that have been identified in one country are able to spread rapidly across the globe.

    The UK can offer expertise and capacity in crucial areas like genome sequencing and epidemiology that have already proven vital in mapping and restricting the spread of coronavirus. It is vital, not only for protecting the lives of millions in the subcontinent, but also in limiting the spread of potentially vaccine-resilient variants to our own shores.

    This pandemic has been a stark reminder of the importance of global collaboration. Now is not the moment for the UK to step back from our international obligations, but to step forward and show real leadership.

  • Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on “Bodies Pile High” Allegations

    Angela Rayner – 2021 Comments on “Bodies Pile High” Allegations

    The comments made by Angela Rayner, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, on 26 April 2021.

    It now appears that we have confirmation that as the second wave of Covid took hold and the Government lost control of the virus in the UK, Boris Johnson’s disgraceful reaction was to say “let the bodies pile high.”

    The Prime Minister has degraded the office he holds with rampant and overwhelming sleaze. But making light of the more than 127,000 deaths that happened on his watch and then trying to cover it up is a new low. This must now end.

    The Prime Minister should apologise to all those who have lost someone during the pandemic.