Category: Coronavirus

  • Gavin Williamson – 2020 Comments on Army Helping with Testing in Schools

    Gavin Williamson – 2020 Comments on Army Helping with Testing in Schools

    The comments made by Gavin Williamson, the Secretary of State for Education, on 29 December 2020.

    It is a true cross-government effort to make sure secondary schools and colleges have the support, guidance, materials and funding they need to offer rapid testing to their staff and students from the start of term.

    I am grateful to the armed forces personnel, and all the school and college staff, leaders and volunteers working to put testing in place. This will help break chains of transmission, fight the virus, and help deliver the national priority of keeping education open for all.

  • Ben Wallace – 2020 Comments on Army Helping with Testing in Schools

    Ben Wallace – 2020 Comments on Army Helping with Testing in Schools

    The comments made by Ben Wallace, the Secretary of State for Defence, on 29 December 2020.

    The UK Armed Forces are stepping up once again this holiday. This week I have authorised over a thousand Armed Forces personnel to assist schools returning after the Christmas break.

    They’ll share considerable experience of testing across the country and the successful school pilots conducted this autumn.

    We are grateful for the professionalism and commitment they and our colleagues in teaching are showing to get students back into the classroom and on with their education.

  • Kate Green – 2020 Comments on Publishing SAGE Advice

    Kate Green – 2020 Comments on Publishing SAGE Advice

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 29 December 2020.

    The Government cannot continue to hide from reality and must urgently publish the scientific advice on the return of schools.

    Parents, pupils and staff are incredibly concerned about what will happen next week, with the Prime Minister governing through media leaks rather than evidence and clarity.

    The Government has lost control of the virus and children’s education is suffering as a result. It’s time for the Prime Minister to own his mistakes and be honest about whether students can return to schools and colleges in a week’s time.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Over 600,000 Receiving Vaccine

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Over 600,000 Receiving Vaccine

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 24 December 2020.

    Thanks to a huge effort from the NHS to overcome significant logistical challenges, 616,933 people across the UK have had their jab of the coronavirus vaccine.

    In just over 3 weeks, the NHS in every part of the UK has already set up hundreds of vaccination sites to ensure those most in need can receive their jab as quickly as possible.

    This is just the beginning and we are continually expanding our vaccination programme to help everyone get back to normal in the future.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Increased Funding for Testing in Care Homes

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Increased Funding for Testing in Care Homes

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

    We have worked throughout the pandemic to protect staff, and residents in care homes and today we are boosting rapid testing in care homes, with a further £149 million pounds to support that effort. All those who work in care homes across England will receive 2 rapid tests a week, in addition to their weekly PCR test.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

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

    I’m joined by Dr Jenny Harries, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, and Dr Susan Hopkins, the Chief Medical Advisor to Public Health England and NHS Test and Trace.

    We all know that 2020 has been a hard year.

    And it is ending in this festive period, which is going to be very different.

    After all the efforts that we’ve gone through to control this virus, and in many parts of the country, this virus is under control.

    Just as we’ve got a tiering system in place that was able to control this virus, we’ve discovered a new, more contagious virus, a variant which is spreading at a dangerous rate.

    And I know that the vast majority of people watching today and across the country understand what we need to do together to get through this.

    So today we’re announcing further action within the tiering system and also some further progress on vaccines and on testing.

    And I just wanted to say this before I set out the details of what we’re going to have to put in place: I know this action has consequences.

    And I know how difficult it is.

    But I also know that it is right to take the action that is necessary to control this virus.

    Across the country, cases have risen 57% in the last week

    The average daily COVID hospital admissions are 1,909 a day – that’s the highest figure since mid-April.

    There are 18,943 people in hospital right now, that’s almost as many as at the peak.

    And yesterday, 691 deaths from coronavirus were reported. That’s 691 people who have died just before Christmas. And our hearts go out to their families and loved ones as with all those that have died from this horrible disease.

    I know the pain this causes.

    So against this backdrop of rising infections, rising hospitalisations and rising number of people dying from coronavirus, it is absolutely vital that we act.

    We simply cannot have the kind of Christmas that we all yearn for.

    Of course, it’s the social contact that makes Christmas so special. But it is that social contact that the virus thrives on, and that’s how the virus has spread from one person to another.

    So it’s important that we all minimise our social contact as much as is possible this Christmas, and that will help protect ourselves, our loved ones and the whole country.

    We’ve got to keep our resolve. We’ve got to keep going through this.

    And there are 4 areas of our response that I want to update you on today very specifically.

    Local action

    The first are those tiering decisions that I’ve just mentioned.

    We know that the 3-tiered system worked to control the old variant, and is working now in large parts of the country, especially in Northern England.

    But, we also know that Tier 3 is not enough to control the new variant.

    That is not a hypothesis, it is a fact, and we’ve seen it on the ground.

    We have seen case rates rise in some of places close to where the current Tier 4 restrictions are, in places like East Anglia, where we’ve also detected a significant number of the new variant as we’ve seen case rates rise sharply.

    It is therefore necessary to put more of the East and South East of England into Tier 4.

    We are also taking action in parts of the South West, where there are some early signs of the new variant, and where cases are rising.

    Even though case rates in some of these areas are not as high as in some areas badly affected, in London for instance and in Kent, the direction is clear, and in many cases is quite stark.

    The doubling times are short.

    And we have learnt that when it’s a matter of when, not if we take action.

    It is better to act sooner.

    So, from one minute past midnight on Boxing Day, Sussex, Oxfordshire, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, those parts of Essex not yet in Tier 4, Waverley in Surrey, and Hampshire, including Portsmouth and Southampton, but with the exception of the New Forest, will be escalated to Tier 4.

    Bristol, Gloucestershire, Somerset, including the North Somerset Council area, Swindon, the Isle of Wight, New Forest and Northamptonshire, as well as Cheshire and Warrington, will be escalated to Tier 3.

    And I’m afraid Cornwall and Herefordshire have seen sharply rising rates and need to be escalated to Tier 2.

    This is not news that anybody wants to deliver.

    And I am truly sorry for the disruption that it causes.

    But I think people know how important it is that we take decisions like this to keep people safe and to protect the NHS.

    South Africa

    The second piece of new I want to tell you about is developments on another new strain of this virus.

    Of course, the fight against this virus is a global effort.

    And we are constantly vigilant and looking around the world.

    As part of our surveillance, and thanks to the impressive genomic capability of the South Africans, we have detected 2 cases of another new variant of coronavirus here in the UK.

    Both are contacts of cases who have travelled from South Africa over the past few weeks.

    The Chief Scientific Advisor and Chief Medical Officer and others met their South African counterparts over the last day.

    We are incredibly grateful to the South African Government for the rigour of their science, and the openness and the transparency with which they have rightly acted, as we did when we discovered the new variant here.

    This new variant is highly concerning, because it is yet more transmissible and it appeared to have mutated further than the new variant that has been discovered here.

    We have taken the following action.

    First, we are quarantining cases, and close contacts of cases, found here in the UK.

    Second, we are placing immediate restrictions on travel from South Africa.

    Finally, and most importantly, anyone in the UK who has been in South Africa in the past fortnight, and anyone who has been in close contact with anyone who has been in South Africa in the last fortnight, must quarantine immediately.

    By quarantine, I mean they must restrict all contact with any other person whatsoever.

    We will be changing the law to give this legal effect imminently.

    These measures are temporary, while we investigate this further new strain, which is currently being analysed at Porton Down.

    And I want to thank everyone involved for the seriousness with which I know they will take these instructions.

    Testing

    I’d like to now move onto some more positive developments.

    The third thing I wanted to talk about was an update on testing.

    As you know, we continue rapidly to expand testing capacity here in the UK.

    We are expanding community testing yet further in areas where the rate of infection is highest

    So we can identify people, and especially to identify the around 1 in 3 people, who carry the virus without displaying any symptoms at all.

    116 local areas have now signed up for this community testing, and we are in discussion with more.

    These rapid turnaround tests are proving to be extremely effective at finding cases where we otherwise wouldn’t.

    And I am today publishing an assessment of the Liverpool community testing project, which shows how effective this can be.

    I would urge anyone who has the opportunity to take part to protect their local area.

    And at the same time we are boosting rapid testing in care homes, with a further £149 million to support that effort.

    So all those who work in care homes in England will receive 2 rapid tests a week, in addition to their weekly PCR test.

    Vaccines

    Finally, amid all this difficulty, the great hope for 2021 is of course the vaccine.

    The vaccine is our route out of all this.

    And, however tough this Christmas and this winter is going to be, we know that the transforming force of science is helping find a way through.

    I am delighted to be able to announce that the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, developed here in the UK, has submitted its full data package to the MHRA for approval.

    This is the next step towards a decision on the deployment of the vaccine, which is already being manufactured including here in the UK.

    We are, of course, continuing to deploy the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, which is being delivered now from over 500 sites all across the UK, and we are adding more all of the time and we are accelerating the rollout.

    I am also delighted to be able to announce that we have begun vaccination in care homes.

    We know that people who live in care homes are amongst those most vulnerable to this disease, and I’m delighted that we’re able to do this. It is another enormous logistical challenge, and I am very grateful to colleagues in the NHS and social care sector, who have worked so hard together to make this happen.

    This afternoon, it gives me great joy to tell you that the Chelsea Pensioners will be vaccinated, along with care home residents right across the country.

    I think we all need a bit of good news.

    And the reality is this vaccine programme is the we are going to get this.

    Because every time someone is vaccinated, our country becomes a little bit safer, they become a little bit safer and we get a little bit closer to the life that we all want to get back to.

    Achievements this year

    As I sincerely hope this is my last press conference before Christmas.

    I want to take a moment firstly to thank you, and everyone watching, for the sacrifices you’ve made.

    And I want to thank my whole team, who have done so much, including those here, including Susan and Jenny, but including the huge team in the NHS, in the Department and right across the board.

    As a country, we have been faced with the most enormous challenges, and it has been very tough.

    But I especially want to thank those who help this country to become the first in the world to roll out a clinically approved vaccine.

    I want to thank all those that have helped us build a bigger capacity genomic testing than anywhere else in the world – and of course the biggest testing capacity in Europe.

    I want to thank our scientist who discovered the first proven treatment for coronavirus.

    And I want to thank everybody working in the NHS and in social care for the work that they’ve done this year, and also for the work that’s going to carry on this winter.

    And especially to colleagues are going to work over Christmas, which of course is so important in the NHS and in social care.

    Look, I know how hard 2020 has been for everybody.

    And after delivering some really difficult news, if I may I want to end on a reflection about where we are as a country.

    This Christmas, and the start of 2021, is going to be tough.

    The new variant makes everything much harder, because it spreads so much faster.

    But we mustn’t give up now. We know that we can control this virus, we know that we can get through this together.

    We’re going to get through it by suppressing the virus, until a vaccine can make us safe, and that has been our strategy and that’s what we must do.

    And I know that we can do this. We’ve seen so much sacrifice.

    We’re not going to give up now, especially after so much sacrifice.

    I know that some of these decisions are tough.

    But I believe that everybody making the right decisions, and I believe that everybody will do what is needed to keep themselves and others safe, especially this Christmas.

    And I know from the bottom of my heart that there are brighter skies ahead.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Government’s Press Conference on 23 December

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Government’s Press Conference on 23 December

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

    Families across the country will be understandably alarmed and anxious at the escalation in the prevalence of this horrific virus.

    Ministers need to act quickly. The usual Boris Johnson dither has disastrous consequences. It’s fiercely urgent that ministers increase vaccination roll out to save lives and minimise harm.

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 21 December 2020.

    Good afternoon,

    I want to update everyone on one thing and that’s what’s happening at our borders and especially at Dover.

    Last night at 11pm the French Government imposed restrictions on UK freight crossing to France when accompanied by a driver.

    And so today I chaired a meeting of the Government’s emergency, COBR committee

    in order to co-ordinate a UK-wide response.

    And it is vital first to stress that these delays

    – which are only occurring at Dover –

    only affect human-handled freight,

    and that is only 20 per cent of the total arriving from or departing to the European continent,

    which means the vast majority of food, medicines and other supplies are coming and going as normal.

    You may also be aware – in fact I’d be amazed if you weren’t –

    that the government has been preparing for a long time for this exactly kind of event.

    So working with the Kent Resilience Forum, Kent County Council and Highways England,

    we’ve activated our long-prepared plans,

    with the result that we have already been able to reduce the number of lorries waiting on the M20 from 500 to 170.

    The site at Manston Airfield is ready to cope with any overflow.

    And, of course, we are working with our friends across the Channel to unblock the flow of trade as fast as possible.

    The Government at all levels is communicating with our friends in Paris

    I have just spoken to President Macron – we had a very good call – we both understand each other’s positions and want to resolve these problems as fast as possible.

    I know that Grant is also speaking to his counterpart and we are working to a solution, as I say, as fast as we can

    to allow freight traffic to resume between the UK and France,

    and ensure that lorries can travel in both directions in a Covid-secure way.

    I want to stress that we in the UK fully understand the anxieties of our friends about Covid, their anxieties about the new variant,

    but it is also true that we believe the risks of transmission by a solitary driver sitting alone in the cab are really very low.

    And so we hope to make progress as fast as we possibly can.

    I want to repeat that these delays only apply to a very small percentage of food entering the UK,

    and as British supermarkets have said, their supply chains are strong and robust,

    so everyone can continue to shop normally.

    And to our international friends and partners I want to say very frankly:

    We understand your concerns,

    And I hope that everybody can see that as soon as we were briefed as a government of the fast transmissibility of this new strain at about 3.15pm on Friday afternoon,

    We lodged all the necessary information with the World Health Organisation

    And we took prompt and decisive action the very next day to curb the spread of the variant within the UK.

    And we want to work with our colleagues, with our friends around the world, as we have from the beginning to develop new treatments and new vaccines.

    And today I can announce that half a million people in the UK have now received their first dose.

    As we’ve seen throughout this pandemic, this virus alas can move all too swiftly from one nation to another,

    But it is steadily being defeated by an international response

    An international response that is bringing the hope of vaccines to the entire world,

    And in that the UK will continue to play our full part.

    I’ll now handover to our Secretary of State, Grant.

  • Chris Whitty – 2020 Statement on New Strain of Virus

    Chris Whitty – 2020 Statement on New Strain of Virus

    The statement made by Chris Whitty, the Chief Medical Officer, on 19 December 2020.

    As announced on Monday, the UK has identified a new variant of Covid-19 through Public Health England’s genomic surveillance.

    As a result of the rapid spread of the new variant, preliminary modelling data and rapidly rising incidence rates in the South East, the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG) now consider that the new strain can spread more quickly.

    We have alerted the World Health Organisation and are continuing to analyse the available data to improve our understanding.

    There is no current evidence to suggest the new strain causes a higher mortality rate or that it affects vaccines and treatments although urgent work is underway to confirm this.

    Given this latest development it is now more vital than ever that the public continue to take action in their area to reduce transmission.

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 Emergency Statement on Covid-19 and Christmas

    Boris Johnson – 2020 Emergency Statement on Covid-19 and Christmas

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 19 December 2020.

    Good afternoon,

    I am sorry to report that the situation has deteriorated since I last spoke to you three days ago.

    Yesterday afternoon, I was briefed on the latest data showing the virus spreading more rapidly in London, the South East and the East of England than would be expected given the tough restrictions which are already in place.

    I also received an explanation for why the virus is spreading more rapidly in these areas. It appears this spread is now being driven by the new variant of the virus, which we first learned about earlier this week.

    Our advisory group on New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats – NERVTAG – has spent the last few days analysing the new variant.

    There is no evidence the variant causes more severe illness or higher mortality, but it does appear to be passed on significantly more easily.

    NERVTAG’s early analysis suggests the new variant could increase R by 0.4 or greater. Although there is considerable uncertainty, it may be up to 70% more transmissible than the old variant.

    This is early data. It is subject to review. It is the best we have at the moment, and we have to act on information as we have it because this is now spreading very fast.

    The U.K. has by far the best genomic sequencing ability in the world, which means we are better able to identify new strains like this than any other country.

    The Chief Medical Officer last night submitted our findings so far to the World Health Organisation and we will continue to be totally transparent with our global partners.

    There is still much we don’t know. While we are fairly certain the variant is transmitted more quickly, there is no evidence to suggest that it is more lethal or causes more severe illness. Equally there is no evidence to suggest the vaccine will be any less effective against the new variant.

    Our experts will continue their work to improve our understanding of the variant.

    So we are learning more about this variant as we go.

    But we know enough already to be sure that we must act now.

    I met ministers on the Covid Operations Committee last night and again first thing this morning, and Cabinet met at lunchtime to agree the following actions.

    First, we will introduce new restrictions in the most affected areas – specifically those parts of London, the South East and the East of England which are currently in tier 3.

    These areas will enter a new tier 4, which will be broadly equivalent to the national restrictions which were in place in England in November.

    That means:

    Residents in those areas must stay at home, apart from limited exemptions set out in law. Non-essential retail, indoor gyms and leisure facilities, and personal care services must close. People must work from home if they can, but may travel to work if this is not possible, for example in the construction and manufacturing sectors. People should not enter or leave tier 4 areas, and tier 4 residents must not stay overnight away from home. Individuals can only meet one person from another household in an outdoor public space.

    Unlike the November national restrictions, communal worship can continue to take place in tier 4 areas.

    These measures will take effect from tomorrow morning.

    All tiers will continue to be regularly reviewed in line with the approach previously set out, with the next formal review point taking place on 30 December.

    Second, we are issuing new advice on travel.

    Although the new variant is concentrated in tier 4 areas, it is nonetheless present at lower levels around the country.

    We are asking everyone, in all tiers, to stay local.

    People should carefully consider whether they need to travel abroad and follow the rules in their tier.

    Those in tier 4 areas will not be permitted to travel abroad apart from limited exceptions, such as for work purposes.

    Third, we must, I am afraid, look again at Christmas.

    As Prime Minister, it is my duty to take the difficult decisions, to do what is right to protect the people of this country.

    Given the early evidence we have on this new variant of the virus, and the potential risk it poses, it is with a heavy heart that I must tell you we cannot continue with Christmas as planned.

    In England, those living in tier 4 areas should not mix with anyone outside their own household at Christmas, though support bubbles will remain in place for those at particular risk of loneliness or isolation.

    Across the rest of the country, the Christmas rules allowing up to three households to meet will now be limited to Christmas Day only, rather than the five days as previously set out.

    As before, there will be no relaxation on 31 December, so people must not break the rules at New Year.

    I know how much emotion people invest in this time of year, and how important it is for grandparents to see their grandchildren, and for families to be together.

    So I know how disappointing this will be, but we have said throughout this pandemic that we must and we will be guided by the science.

    When the science changes, we must change our response.

    When the virus changes its method of attack, we must change our method of defence.

    As your Prime Minister, I sincerely believe there is no alternative open to me. Without action, the evidence suggests infections would soar, hospitals would become overwhelmed and many thousands more would lose their lives.

    I want to stress we are not alone in this fight – many of our European friends and neighbours are being forced to take similar action.

    We are working closely with the devolved administrations to protect people in every part of the UK.

    Of course there is now hope – real hope – that we will soon be rid of this virus.

    That prospect is growing with every day that passes and every vaccine dose administered.

    The UK was the first country in the western world to start using a clinically approve vaccine.

    So please, if the NHS contacts you then get your vaccine – and join the 350,000 people across the UK who have already had their first dose.

    Yes, Christmas this year will be very different, but we must be realistic.

    We are sacrificing our chance to see loved ones this Christmas, so we have a better chance of protecting their lives so we can see them at future Christmases.

    As sure as night follows day, we will beat back this virus.

    We will defeat it.

    And we will reclaim our lives.