Johnson faces calls to clarify tipping point for further Covid curbs
New NHS data shows staff absent for Covid reasons at acute trusts in England rose by 54% last week.
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Your support makes all the difference.The Government is under pressure to clarify its tipping point for imposing further restrictions as new figures show the number of NHS staff absent for Covid reasons at acute trusts in London more than doubled last week.
Across England as a whole, 18,829 NHS staff at acute hospital trusts were absent due to reasons relating to coronavirus on December 19, up 54% from 12,240 a week earlier and up 51% from 12,508 at the start of the month, according to the data from NHS England.
In London, 3,874 NHS staff at acute trusts were absent for Covid reasons on December 19, more than double the number a week earlier (1,540) and more than three times the number at the start of the month (1,174).
The total included staff who were ill with Covid or who were having to self-isolate.
Chris Hopson chief executive of NHS Providers, said the service is preparing to expand capacity in case a āsurgeā of healthcare is needed, but it will be able to manage increased hospital cases.
The news comes as Boris Johnson has been facing calls to outline his post-Christmas Covid strategy for England, with leaders in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland having all announced new restrictions to tackle the Omicron variant.
Labour has called for āmore clarityā from the Government on its plans, with Lucy Powell, the shadow secretary of state for digital, culture, media and sport, claiming Mr Johnson is unable to make calls on Covid data because he has ālost authority with the publicā.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid acknowledged that staff absences due to Covid are adding to pressures on the NHS but said the easing of self-isolation rules will help.
He also said there will be no further announcements on restrictions in England before Christmas.
In other developments:
ā Mr Hopson said the NHS is facing its busiest Christmas period ever, with bed occupancy rates 5% higher than last year.
ā Professor Paul Elliott, director of the REACT-1 programme, said the NHS could still be under huge pressure despite the possibility that the Omicron variant may cause milder disease.
ā Professor Andrew Hayward, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said he does not think further Covid measures in England will mean āthe sort of prolonged periods of restrictions that we were talking about beforeā.
ā Professor Anthony Harnden, of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), said a decision on whether to offer jabs to all five to 11-year-olds will be ācarefullyā reviewed over the following few weeks.
Ms Powell told Sky News on Thursday morning there is a āfeelingā that āthe Prime Minister is not actually able to take those decisions based very clearly on data because heās got his own political problems, and heās lost authority with the public in order to convey some of those messagesā.
She said: āI think what we would like to seeā¦ is more clarity around what data points the Government is looking at, where the thresholds lie within those areas that are data points, and if those thresholds are crossed, what action would then follow, or what action wouldnāt follow if the data comes back in a more positive way, as it has done this morning.
āWhat are theā¦ set of restrictions that may or may not come in depending on those data points? Because at the moment, I think a lot of people just feel like theyāre really stabbing in the dark.ā
Earlier on Thursday, the Welsh economy minister said he does not think Englandās position on Covid restrictions will remain the same āfor very much longerā.
Vaughan Gething told Times Radio: āWeāve doubled our package because we know that there is a direct impact from the alert level two-style interventions weāve had to introduce to protect the public.
āIāve met regularly with Dave Chapman (UKHospitalityās executive director for Wales) and other stakeholders over the last few days making clear the seriousness of the position weāre atā¦ weāre actually being a bit more generous than the money thatās on offer in England.
āOf course, Daveās talking about England continuing to be open. Well, Iām not sure thatās going to be the position for very much longer.ā
Mr Gething also said England is āout of stepā with the other three UK nations on its Covid response.
Asked about plans in Wales to curb the spread of the virus, he told Times Radio: āScotland and Northern Ireland have taken relatively similar measures yesterday ā itās England thatās out of step with the other three nations.
āWe are a little more cautious certainly than England is, but thatās because we think itās the right call.ā
It emerged on Thursday that people who catch the Omicron variant of Covid may be less likely to end up in hospital amid rising case rates and new restrictions across the UK nations.
However, Professor Neil Ferguson, from the Imperial College London team behind one of the studies, warned Omicronās severity may be offset by the āreduced efficacyā of vaccines to stop it being transmitted.
Ministers have stressed the Government is constantly considering new Covid data, with health minister Gillian Keegan saying on Wednesday: āThere is uncertainty. We canāt predict what the data is going to tell us before weāve got the data.ā
But Mr Javid said on Thursday that no further restrictions will be set out before Christmas.
āWe are not planning any further announcements this week,ā he told broadcasters.
āDespite the caution that we are all taking, people should enjoy their Christmases with their families and their friends ā of course, remain cautious.
āWe will keep the situation under review. We are learning more all the time, as we have done from this new data.
āWe will keep analysing that data and if we need to do anything more we will, but nothing more is going to happen before Christmas.ā