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Coronavirus news – live: Hancock rules out ditching support bubbles and tells shops to ban non-mask wearers

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Chiara Giordano,Joe Middleton,Peter Stubley
Monday 11 January 2021 18:57 EST
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Hancock rules out removing support bubbles

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Eric Garcia

Washington Bureau Chief

Matt Hancock has dismissed press reports he was considering getting rid of support bubbles and backed supermarkets to ban shoppers who do not wear a face covering.

It comes as ministers are said to be discussing tighter lockdown rules to stop people meeting outdoors and to make mask-wearing in shops a legal requirement.

The current lockdown restrictions in England could be brought closer to those applied during the first national shutdown in March, according to reports.

The proposals for tougher measures include removing the exception that allows two people from different households to exercise together outdoors, while mask-wearing could be enforced more widely, including in offices and queues.

During Monday’s visit to a vaccine centre at Ashton Gate stadium in Bristol, Boris Johnson told reporters that about two million people had so far been vaccinated with around 2.4 million jabs across the UK.

His comments came as seven mass vaccination sites, capable of delivering thousands of Covid-19 jabs each week, opened across England.

England’s chief medical officer has warned the coming weeks are going “to be the worst weeks” of the coronavirus pandemic for the NHS.

Professor Chris Whitty said that while 18,000 people were in hospital with Covid-19 during the April peak last year, on Sunday there were more than 30,000 beds occupied by patients with the disease.

He said the pandemic was now “everybody’s problem” as he urged people to "double down" and stop any "unnecessary contacts".

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‘This is everyone’s problem’, says Whitty

Professor Chris Whitty has urged people to "double down" and stop any "unnecessary contacts".

He told BBC Breakfast: "What we need to do before the vaccines have had their effect - because it's going to take several weeks before that happens - is we need to really double down.

"This is everybody's problem, any single unnecessary contact with someone is a potential link in a chain of transmission that will lead to a vulnerable person.

"We've all got to, as individuals, help the NHS, help our fellow citizens, by minimising the amount of unnecessary contacts we have."

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:50
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First person receives coronavirus vaccine at Epsom racecourse

Moira Edwards, 88, became the first person to receive a coronavirus jab at Epsom racecourse in Surrey - one of seven mass vaccination sites to open in England today.

Ms Edwards, from Cobham, in Surrey, who received her first dose beside her daughter Clare Edwards, said it was "extremely important" to get the vaccine.

She said: "Having this vaccine makes it a step closer to being with my family again and giving them a big hug."

Moira Edwards, 88, receives the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine at an NHS vaccine centre set up at Epsom Downs Racecourse
Moira Edwards, 88, receives the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine at an NHS vaccine centre set up at Epsom Downs Racecourse (Dominic Lipinski/PA)
Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:43
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Lockdown measures could last until ‘some time in spring’, says Whitty

Professor Chris Whitty suggested measures could be needed until "some time in the spring" to stem the spread of the virus.

"We've got to make this sustainable because we’ve got to be able to maintain this for several more weeks now," England's chief medical officer told BBC Breakfast.

"We're really going to have to do a significant action for all of us for several more weeks until probably some time in the spring for very much of what we have to do.

"So, we do obviously need to be able to do essential work which they can't do from home. We fully accept that that's necessary to keep society going because you've got to be able to do it over a period of time.

"So, the three things that people can leave home for are essential work where they can't do it from home, when they are doing exercise - which is very important for people's physical health, their mental health - and for essential things like shopping or medical intervention."

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:35
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People are getting ‘fed up’ with lockdown rules, says police chief

Paul Netherton, Deputy Chief Constable of Devon and Cornwall Police, said people are getting "fed up" of lockdown restrictions and compliance from the public has dipped.

When asked whether it was harder to get people to comply with rules in the current lockdown compared to previous ones, he said: "Yes, I think people are beginning to get fed up with it.

"I can understand that but we have to be firm, we have to save lives, we have to make sure people are keeping apart, isolating and staying at home."

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:30
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Life will return to normal but is ‘a long way away’, admits Whitty

Life will return to normal after the coronavirus pandemic but it is “a long way away” and will depend on people sticking to lockdown rules and the mass rollout of vaccines, England’s chief medical officer has said.

Professor Chris Whitty told the BBC: "I am confident we will go back to life as it was before at some point, that's not in doubt, that's the life we all want to lead."

Once vaccines are rolled out, he said, "people will be able to have the restrictions lifted. It won't happen in one go, and at a certain point, hopefully you'll get back to a life that is basically exactly the same as it was before."

"However, we're quite a long way away from that at the moment," he added.

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:14
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UK to face ‘worst weeks of pandemic’

England’s chief medical officer has warned the coming weeks are going “to be the worst weeks" of the coronavirus pandemic for the NHS, as he urged the public to minimise unnecessary contacts.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, professor Chris Whitty said: “The peak we had back in April last year, we had about 18,000 people in the NHS. As of yesterday we had over 30,000 people in the NHS.

“This is going to be a significant crisis for the NHS unless we take evasive action. We have a very significant problem.”

Political correspondent Ashley Cowburn has more details:

UK to face ‘worst weeks of pandemic’, Whitty warns as cases surge

England’s chief medical officer has warned the coming weeks are going “to be the worst weeks" of the coronavirus pandemic for the NHS, as he urged the public to minimise unnecessary contacts.

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 08:04
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‘We’re reviewing all the restrictions’, says vaccine minister

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi was unable to assure that the current "tough" lockdown restrictions are sufficient and raised concerns of people not sticking to the rules in supermarkets or when exercising outside.

Pressed on whether the current restrictions are enough, he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We don't want to use tougher measures, the lockdown is tough, schools are shut, but it is important to remember this virus loves social interactions.

"We're reviewing all the restrictions, but these are pretty tough at the moment. I am worried about supermarkets and people actually wearing masks and following the one-way system, and making sure when it's at capacity they wait outside the supermarket.

"I'm worried about some of the pictures I've seen of social interactions in parks, if you have to exercise you can go out for exercise only."

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 07:59
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Seven mass vaccination sites open in England

Thousands more people are expected to be given a Covid-19 jab as seven mass vaccination sites open across England today.

The new centres - including at a football stadium and a tennis club - will be joined later this week by hundreds more GP-led and hospital services along with the first pharmacy-led pilot sites, taking the total to around 1,200, NHS England said.

The seven new England vaccine centres opening today are: Ashton Gate in Bristol, Epsom racecourse in Surrey, the Excel Centre where London's Nightingale hospital is based, Newcastle's Centre for Life, the Manchester Tennis and Football Centre, Robertson House in Stevenage and Birmingham's Millennium Point.

Health secretary Matt Hancock is due to visit one of the centres before setting out the Government's vaccines delivery plan at a Downing Street press conference on Monday afternoon.

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 07:52
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Lockdown restrictions could get tougher across England

Senior ministers have reportedly discussed the prospect of introducing tighter lockdown controls across England in an effort to improve compliance with the current rules.

The government is said to be considering scrapping the exemption allowing people to exercise with one other person from outside of their household or support bubble - and toughening mask-wearing rules  to include offices, queues and other crowded outdoor spaces.

Peter Stubley has more details on this below:

Covid restrictions on exercise and masks ‘could be tightened’

Ministers looking at tougher measures amid concerns laws ‘too lax’

Chiara Giordano11 January 2021 07:51

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