@IndependentSage are holding an emergency press conference at 10AM today.
You can watch along here:
The following thread is a summary of our position.
(Figures - based on English data only - excellently prepared by @chrischirp)
The pandemic in England is now at the most threatening stage of the entire year. The number of cases are at the highest they have been since the start of community testing in May, with over 40,000 people testing positive each day in the couple of days before Christmas.
There are now more people in hospital with Covid-19 than at any point during the pandemic. Admissions each day are still rising (over 2,200 on Boxing Day). With cases still rising steeply, pressures on the NHS in England will get significantly worse over the next few weeks.
Over 27,000 people have died within 28 days of a positive Covid-19 test since September, compared to almost 37,000 from March to August this year. There were over 3,000 deaths in the last week alone, reflecting people infected at the beginning of December ...
... Since then, cases have almost tripled and hospital admissions almost doubled. This means that the number of deaths will, unfortunately, increase and keep increasing for several weeks yet. Deaths from the second wave will probably exceed those in the first wave in January.
Failure to implement a circuit breaker, recommended by SAGE at the end of September, resulted in a delayed a lockdown until November. As a result, a new variant of Covid-19 (B117), since shown to be more transmissible, was given the opportunity to spread widely ...
... particularly in the East, South East and South Wales. It also meant that England entered December with a high number of cases, despite lockdown, and a high number of people in hospital.
The new variant has come to rapidly dominate cases in London, the South East and East of England, but it is present in all regions. The SAGE modelling subgroup believe that by mid-January the new variant will be the dominant strain across the whole of England.
The very rapid rise of cases in London, the South East and East of England under restrictions that previously kept growth much slower, highlights the need for a radical rethink of how we deal with Covid-19 going forward.
The existing tier system in England is simply not sufficient, even where the new variant is rare. Cases are increasing, albeit more slowly, across all English regions. If, as anticipated, the new variant takes hold across the country, transmission will increase in all areas.
While the new variant is not thought to cause more severe disease than the standard strain of Covid-19, its greater infectiousness will inevitably lead to many more hospitalisations and deaths as more people catch it.
The regions where B117 is prevalent, most notably London, have seen a much more rapid rise in hospital admissions than other regions and London now has by far the highest admission rates in the country.
On Boxing Day, several LAs were allocated to a higher tier, with all of the South East of England now in Tier 4 (highest level) and most of the Midlands and much of the North in Tier 3. Matt Hancock acknowledged that Tiers 2 and 3 are not enough to suppress the new variant.
Cases in Tier 3 and Tier 2 areas have been steadily increasing since the beginning of December. Cases in current Tier 2 areas have more than doubled since the end of Lockdown on 2nd December. Cases in current Tier 3 areas have grown by 40% in the same time period.
Meanwhile, cases in current Tier 4 areas have quadrupled since lockdown. It is now over 10 days since Tier 4 was imposed on London, Kent and parts of East England. If cases in these areas do not reduce soon, then we cannot expect Tier 4 to be enough to contain Covid-19 in England
With a highly effective vaccine being rolled out, with more vaccines to be approved shortly, it is unconscionable that Covid-19 be allowed to run rampant through our communities. We urgently need a new plan to control Covid-19 into 2021 and aggressively drive down cases.
Delayed and tentative decision making will result in the deaths of tens of thousands more people. Modellers from the SAGE modelling subgroup estimate that even under national Tier 4, another 100,000 people could die before the end of June 2021...
...In that scenario, hundreds of thousands others would go on to suffer long term effects from Covid-19 and the NHS would be brought to its knees. The government needs to act now to prevent this catastrophe.
We strongly urge that the following strategy be adopted immediately:
1. A nationwide lockdown with immediate effect is vitally necessary now.
2. Schools contribute to the increasing transmission (R rate). We all want staff and children in schools safely, but sadly that is not an option now for at least a month...
...The unprecedented crisis requires Government immediately provide digital access for all children, recruiting retired teachers and others to help provide online teaching, enabling children who can’t work from home to attend school along with vulnerable and key worker children..
The Government should use January to make schools safe, e.g. extra space from unused buildings to enable 2 metre distancing, free masks and encourage all to wear them, multiple sanitiser stations and support for improved ventilation...
...There should be an immediate Government taskforce, including teaching unions, local authorities, governing bodies and parents, to implement this plan.
3. There must be a clear strategy to mark the end-point of the new lockdown. This is when the number of new cases has dropped to the point where all those with the disease and in contact with them are isolated, with support where necessary, from the rest of the population...
...A fully operative Find, Test, Trace, Isolate and Support system must be in place through local public health services and the army, which will need appropriate funding (tbc).

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More from @Kit_Yates_Maths

30 Dec 20
A couple more points that I couldn't fit in the original thread.
4. An explicit strategy for vaccine rollout is required. Current rates of immunisation, whilst a good start, are insufficient to ensure coverage of priority groups by Easter 2021.
The necessary primary-care-led upscale requires new resources and staffing now. Appropriate support and messaging to all communities is required to ensure sufficient uptake to establish population immunity, and minimise death, disease and long-term physical and mental ill-health.
5. We must also support and contribute to the rapid roll out of the vaccine to low and middle income countries – the more Covid-19 is allowed to spread, the more opportunities it has to develop new mutations.
Read 4 tweets
30 Dec 20
Just on @bbc5live with @rickedwards1 discussing the difficult situation we find ourselves in.
“Hospitalisations across the country are high and combined with the fact that cases are still rising this is a recipe for disaster “
In part the high reported cases numbers are due to delays in reporting, but if reporting were normal it is still likely that the last few days would have seen record numbers.
Looking by specimen date we’ve seen over 40,000 cases per day even before Christmas.
Hospital admissions are rising everywhere. Health officials in England and Wales have said they are at real risk of becoming overwhelmed.
We are hearing reports of hospitals running low on beds and Oxygen as well as ambulances waiting over 6 hours to hand over patients.
Read 7 tweets
18 Dec 20
A short thread on Hospitalisations and deaths in the UK/England.
After dipping briefly, hospitalisations with COVID started to increase a couple of weeks ago at the end of the lockdown reflecting increases in cases in the week before lockdown ended.
Over all hospital occupancy is increasing again and will almost certainly breach April's peak levels in the next few weeks given the fact cases are still rising and we are about to enter a period of easing at Christmas.
In total around 113,000 people were recorded as admitted to hospital with COVID in the first wave (March to mid-August). So far (mid-August onwards) we have had around 92,000. This second wave looks like it will far surpass the first wave numbers (and fairly soon).
Read 6 tweets
18 Dec 20
A look at where we cases are in the UK as we head towards a period of relaxed restrictions at Christmas next week.
Cases are rising across the UK as a whole with the single highest day of recorded cases yesterday...
Part of that rise is due to Wales reporting a backlog of 11,000 cases, but if Wales had been reporting normally this would probably still have been our second highest date of reported cases.
I had to move my y-axis scale upwards this week which is never a good sign.
Case numbers appear to be rising in all four UK nations. Wales is particularly bad (these cases by specimen date figures are not affected by the reporting issue) which perhaps explains why Wales is going into a strict three-week lockdown on 28th December.
Read 11 tweets
30 Nov 20
WE NEED To TALK ABOUT SCHOOLS.
Here are of the graphs and figures I presented at the @IndependentSage briefing on Friday along with our safer schools report:
independentsage.org/wp-content/upl…
A short thread...
Lets start by acknowledging there is an increasingly polarised debate around closing or keeping schools open with both sides arguing their side passionately.
SAGE have suggested that schools might contribute between 0.2-0.5 to R.
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
If schools were closed this would serve to bring cases down more quickly.
Schools are also places of work. Both students and teachers need to be able to work in a safe environment.
Read 15 tweets
27 Nov 20
A summary of the data I presented at this afternoon's @IndependentSage briefing taking in the latest on Cases, Hospitalisations and Death statistics.
On cases and hospital admissions, it's largely been a good news week.
A thread. 1/13
Cases first.
Across the whole of the UK reported cases have been falling for a couple of weeks now, and fairly steeply, although from a high peak.
We're down to a 7-day average of around 15,000 cases per day.
Across the country cases (per 100K) in most Local Authorities have fallen compared to where we were on lockdown day (3 weeks ago 5/11/20).
A few areas have gone backwards, but for most cases are coming down.
Maps by @TravellingTabby
Read 13 tweets

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