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Boris Johnson moved to intensive care after coronavirus symptoms worsen, Downing Street confirms

‘The condition of the prime minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved’

Kate Devlin,Rob Merrick,Jane Dalton
Monday 06 April 2020 16:19 EDT
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Boris Johnson moved to intensive care

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Boris Johnson has been moved to intensive care after his coronavirus symptoms worsened, just hours after Downing Street insisted he was in good spirits and in control of the government’s response to the escalating crisis.

The prime minister is understood to still be conscious and to have been moved as a precaution, in case he requires ventilation to aid his recovery.

He was given oxygen to help his breathing before he went into the intensive care unit, sources said last night.

The PM was said to be receiving excellent care and thanked all NHS staff for their “hard work and dedication”.

Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, has been asked to deputise for the prime minister “where necessary”.

No 10 sources said that Mr Johnson remains the prime minister but that Mr Raab will lead on the day-to-day running of the response to the coronavirus crisis and other matters.

Mr Raab said that “the prime minister asked me as first secretary to deputise for him where necessary in driving forward the government’s plans to defeat coronavirus”.

Mr Johnson has been “receiving excellent care at St Thomas’s hospital,” Mr Raab added, “and we’d like to take this opportunity as a government to thank NHS staff up and down the country for all of their dedication, hard work and commitment in treating everyone who’s been affected by this awful virus”.

Downing Street spent most of Monday insisting Mr Johnson was still in charge of the government’s handling of the pandemic after he was admitted to hospital on Sunday night.

The decision to move Mr Johnson to intensive care was made by his doctors.

It is understood he was moved to an intensive care unit at around 7pm on Monday evening, and that cabinet ministers were informed of the deterioration in the prime minister’s condition in a phone call with Sir Mark Sedwill, the cabinet secretary.

He was initially admitted to hospital on Sunday for tests after being unwell for more than a week.

No 10 said on Sunday that Mr Johnson had been advised to go to hospital because his symptoms, which included a cough and a temperature, were persistent.

On Monday evening, a No 10 spokesman said in a statement: “Since Sunday evening, the prime minister has been under the care of doctors at St Thomas’ Hospital, in London, after being admitted with persistent symptoms of coronavirus.

“Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the prime minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the intensive care unit at the hospital.

“The PM has asked foreign secretary Dominic Raab, who is the first secretary of state, to deputise for him where necessary.

“The PM is receiving excellent care, and thanks all NHS staff for their hard work and dedication.”

Earlier Mr Raab had chaired the government’s emergency Cobra meeting on the crisis in Mr Johnson’s absence.

But the foreign secretary later admitted he had not spoken to the prime minister in days, amid growing pressure on Mr Johnson to temporarily hand over power if he does not recover quickly.

Members of his own government had earlier urged the prime minister to rest, while former cabinet secretaries warned Mr Johnson should relinquish control if necessary. A Foreign Office minister, James Dudderidge, urged Mr Johnson to “come back fighting” but added: “But for now rest, look after yourself and let the others do the heavy lift.”

Bob Kerslake, a former head of the civil service, said: “If he’s not well enough, it would be sensible to step back and let others take on the role.

“I think in the end, if he’s not well, he will have to reflect on this because the job’s tough at the best of times and it’s doubly tough now,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

Lord O’Donnell, another former cabinet secretary, said the government was not really set up to deal with a prime minister in hospital.

He told BBC Radio 4’s World At One: “If a prime minister becomes so ill that they can’t be [involved in big decisions] or the medical advice is ‘look you really need to rest, you need to stop looking at all of these dreaded red boxes you need to hand on’ then I hope the prime minister ... is able to hand over.”

Andy Street, the Conservative West Midlands mayor, said: “We all have to learn in life, don’t we, that we’re not indispensable and the team around you will step into your shoes if he is not able to do what I know he will be so, so desperate to carry on doing himself.”

Ministers also declined to set out an exit strategy for the current restrictions designed to halt the spread of the disease. There are fears continued good weather could encourage more Britons to flout the guidelines.

At the government’s daily press conference on coronavirus, Mr Raab said he did not want to “confuse the message” as the country was not yet past the peak of the disease, estimated to hit this weekend.

Dame Angela Maclean, the deputy chief scientific adviser, added: “We can only make calculations about what we might do next if we have some reasonable data on how large the impact of what we’ve done is so far.”

Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, said his thoughts were with Mr Johnson and his pregnant partner Carrie Symonds.

In a tweet, he added: “I know he’ll be getting the best care possible and will come out of this even stronger.”

Former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith said the development should bring home the message that anyone can catch coronavirus “and people have to obey the rules”.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the speaker of the Commons, said the thoughts and prayers of MPs from all parties would be with the prime minister.

That view was echoed by Sir Keir Starmer, the new Labour leader, who described the development as “terribly sad” and said the country’s thoughts were with the prime minister.

Crispin Blunt, the Tory MP and former chair of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, said the implications of Mr Johnson’s move to intensive care were “serious” and that the UK needed his leadership.

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