(Bloomberg) — The U.K. is trying various strategies to mitigate the impact of record high coronavirus cases while attempting to stay true to a vow to avoid new lockdowns.
Among the latest moves, Boris Johnson’s government is developing contingency plans to help companies and supply chains avoid disruptions caused by rising staff absences, the Financial Times reported.
It’s asked private businesses to test the plans against a worst-case scenario of as much as 25% in workforce absences, according to the newspaper.
Meanwhile, Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi told the Sunday Telegraph that secondary school students in England will be instructed to once again wear masks in classrooms as the omicron variant spreads.
That will bring the country in line with current measures in Scotland and Wales. The school masking plan for England is currently expected to end on Jan. 26, when virus measures known as Plan B are set to expire.
There were more than 162,000 positive tests for Covid-19 in England on Saturday, about four times the daily level from early December, extending a string of record highs tied to the highly-contagious omicron variant.
London was the strain’s first epicenter in the U.K., and while cases there appear to have plateaued, they’re rising sharply in several other areas, including Northern Ireland, Northwest England, and much of Scotland.
U.K. Health Secretary Sajid Javid on Saturday wrote in the Daily Mail that new “curbs on our freedom must be an absolutely last resort,” citing the “enormous health, social and economic costs of lockdowns.”
Hospital admissions in the U.K., while rising, are far below last winter’s peak — a trend attributed to the nation’s high vaccination rate and aggressive booster program.
Chris Hopson, chief executive officer of NHS Providers, said Saturday in a lengthy Twitter post that “there are currently many fewer, seriously ill, older people needing critical care” compared with a year ago. Deaths from Covid have been holding steady at a fraction of the early-2021 peak.
Still, the National Health Service is “under different, arguably more pressure” compared with a year ago because of a massive backlog of non-Covid patients, he said.
NHS Providers represents workers in the health service’s hospitals, ambulance and mental health services.
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