UK scientists say further easing of COVID rules won't overwhelm health
service
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[April 06, 2021]
LONDON (Reuters) - The next step to
ease COVID-19 lockdown restrictions in England is not expected to put
unsustainable pressure on the health service even if it results in an
uptick of COVID-19 infections, scientists advising the government said
on Monday.
However, the scientists said that a resurgence in hospitalisations and
deaths at some point was still highly likely, though its scale and
timing was uncertain.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to announce later on
Monday that England can proceed to Stage 2 of his roadmap out of
lockdown, allowing hospitality to re-open outdoors next week and the
restart of all retail.
The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE), which advises the
government, said that the move would not overwhelm the state-run
National Health Service (NHS) even if infections rose assuming the
country's successful vaccine programme stays on track.
"Any resurgence in hospital admissions and deaths following Step 2 of
the Roadmap alone is highly unlikely to put unsustainable pressure on
the NHS," SAGE said in the minutes of a March 29 meeting, published on
Monday.
SAGE cited work compiled by the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on
Modelling (SPI-M), which looked at models made by Imperial College
London, Warwick University and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine.
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A woman jogs through Hyde Park, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in London, Britain, April 4, 2021.
REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
SPI-M said that a new peak could occur in summer or autumn, and that
its timing and size would depend on how people behave after
restrictions end.
Whether England can proceed to steps 3 and 4 of lockdown easing,
which could see formal restrictions on social contact end in June,
will depend on data following each step.
"It is highly likely that there will be a further resurgence in
hospitalisations and deaths after the later steps of the Roadmap,"
SPI-M said in a paper published on Monday.
Most scenarios saw any new peak as smaller than the one in January
2021 but more pessimistic assumptions about transmission reduction
and vaccine effectiveness "can result in resurgences in
hospitalisations of a similar scale to January 2021."
The modelling did not account for the possible emergence of
vaccine-escaping variants or looser travel rules.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Kate Holton)
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