TLDR: flattish cases overall are masking differences between nations, regions & age groups. And we're still out of whack with Europe.
1/20
Vaccination update to start:
we've got good vaccination coverage - and excellent in older age groups.
Almost 60% of 16/17 year olds have had one dose of vaccine in England (higher in Scotland). BUT 2/20
There are big gaps in full vaccination uptake between the most and least deprived communities, and lower uptake in ethnic minorities.
This hasn't really improved over the last 6 months - whatever is being tried doesn't seem to be working. 3/20
On tests - the number of lateral flow tests done (or rather, reported!) has really varied with big "back to school" spikes that then drop off.
We're seeing that again now - and the drop off is mainly in students and not staff. Hard to say how this affects case numbers. 4/20
Cases are going up again in the UK - and we've now had substantially more confirmed cases in the Delta wave than the Alpha one. In a few weeks we'll have had more cases than we had between Sept 2020 and May 2021. 5/20
Yes hospitalisations and deaths are much lower than Jan peak - but they are still higher than a year ago and all these cases will be lead to many people develop long covid unfortunately, including some children. 6/
Hospitalisations are going down in all nations (good!) and deaths might just be starting to go down too - although we've been averaging over 130 a day for several weeks now and over 8,000 people have died since 1 July. 7/20
By nation, cases are going up in Wales and England but dropping in Scotland and dropping more slowing in NI.
Similar pattern seen in ONS infection survey (but Scotland not dropping yet - always takes a few weeks for drops in cases to show in ONS) 8/20
Regionally, cases are high all over Wales and in England concentrated in the Midlands and Yorks - lowest of all in London (!).
That pattern is seen in positivity rates too so it's not just testing. 9/20
Cases in Under 15s in Scotland remain high but have come down quickly over the last 10 days or so - and we are seeing a drop in admissions in children too which is good.
But a *lot* of children were infected in the first month of term - over 5% of all children under 15. 10/20
And we are seeing that hospital admissions in their parents' generation have been going up - in fact are higher now than they've ever been in the pandemic despite high vaccination. 11/20
In Wales, cases have been going up steeply in under 17s.
In N. Ireland, we've seen similar record breaking rates in 5-14 year olds. 12/20
In England, case rates in 5-14 are higher than their July peak - about 1.4% of all 10-14 year olds tested positive last week!
Cases also going up again in 15-19 year olds.
And in 30-59 yr olds - the ages most likely to be parents of school children. Following Scotland? 13/20
Hospitalisations in 6-17 year olds were dropping steeply at the beginning of September (corresponding to the late Aug flattening in cases?) but are now rising steeply again - only children have rising admission rates at the moment. 14/20
The number of children testing positive this term has already almost exceeded the number testing positive over the whole of the summer term. (158K vs 172K).
Estimates of Long Covid in kids range from 2%-14% - even 2% of 158K is 3,000 children developing Long covid... 15/20
ONS infection survey (to 18 Sept) also shows cases highest and rising in school age children. over 1 in 50 children had Covid that week. 16/20
Many of these cases could have been prevented with vaccination over the summer. It already looks like it (+ prev infection?) *might* be having an impact in 16-18 year olds...
at least they're the only year groups where cases fell over last 2 weeks instead of climbed. 17/20
Other countries that vaccinated teens are not seeing big back to school spikes in teens (but some are in primary school kids). E.g. Ireland... where cases in teens much lower than England but primary school kids about the same... 18/20
In fact many countries in Europe are not seeing big surges in children - a combination of vaccination (starting at different times over summer) and mitigations in schools (bubbles, masks, ventilation) & lower community case rates. 19/20
So there we are - rising cases in kids & their parents' generation, falling cases elsewhere, A high burden of Covid continues.
I don't know how vax in teens, some immunity from high infections this summer plays out against autumn & people returning to normal behaviour. 20/20
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TLDR: two epidemics really - one in under 18s (and their parents) which is bad and getting worse and the other in everyone else which is getting better.
First - vaccine uptake in 12-15 year olds in England hasn't really started. With such high rates in teens right now this feels like a missed opportunity :-/
1/12
Looking at cases by date of test for each home nation, England and Wales are going up and NI and Scotland coming down. NI seems to be plateauing though.
England and Wales might be peaking (for now at least) 2/12
Vaccines work *really* well in young people. They can and do prevent transmission in schools.
Unvaxxed kids in unmitigated schools and high community rates get infected. A LOT.
Let's compare England & Wales with Rep of Ireland. 1/5
In England, 50% of 16-17 yr olds had 1 dose by 2 September (more in 18/19 yrs). 10% of 15-19 yrs also a confirmed case since 1 May 2021 :-(
A high immunity group.
From early Sept, cases start dropping in 15-19 year olds.
BUT going up and higher than ever in 5-14 year olds. 2/5
In Wales, very similar thing happening - 17-24 year olds dropping a lot over past two weeks.
Meanwhile cases in 0-16 yr olds are climbing very fast and higher than ever. 3/5
The govt released a detailed comparison of children admitted to hospital between wave 1 (spring 2020) and wave 2 (winter 2021) on Friday.
Some things that stand out:
Large marjority (80%) were admitted BECAUSE of covid & almost 60% of children had no underlying conditions 1/3
Once again, we get more confirmation that children have COMMON SYMPTOMS that are NOT the ones govt uses to prompt a test. Eg, vomiting, stomach ache, diarrhoea & fatigue & cold symptoms.
Govt needs to update (and communicate) the symptom list. 2/3
Finally, kids needing hospital much more likely to be non-white and much more likely to be from deprived communities.
High infections in kids do not affect communities the same - a lesson govt still hasn't learned after year or doesn't care about. 3/3
THREAD:
It's tiring to be attacked as if I (and others) am an "extremist" on covid or with suggestions that I'm a mouthpiece for others... when actually I'm very mainstream and it's UK policy that isn't. 1/10
The government's science advisors, SAGE, have literally just warned that we are risking a rough winter through not implementing simple mitigations now assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl… 2/10
The British Medical Assocation have this week highlighted the ongoing burden of Covid on an NHS that is understaffed, underfunded and exhausted.
TLDR overall cases falling but case positivity pretty flat... cases rising in school children but falling in young adults.
Hospitalisations remain relatively high. Simple things now will prevent things getting worse. 1/10
First off - some excellent news: vaccine uptake in 16/17 yr olds is very good and many 20-30 year olds are now fully vaccinated. I have no doubt this is having a big impact on cases! 2/10
Now some less good news... Hospital admissions have fallen slightly this week (good) but remain relatively high, as does hospital occupancy at just over 6,000 inpatients. 3/10
THREAD: Was on @BBCNews earlier discussing yesterday's SAGE consensus statement particularly their advice that relatively minor measures could prevent a big autumn surge
Almost a year ago SAGE advised a 2 week circuit break - we don't need that now with vax BUT we do need *something* in addition to the vaccines.
Alongside masks & some continued homeworking, there are clear things we could do that will help that are NOT RESTRICTIVE AT ALL 2/4
The government plan B does not say what "unsustainable pressure" on the NHS is... but the NHS is already extremely stretched and understaffed - and people are exhausted.
25% of current ICU beds are already Covid patients. We need to protect our NHS not keep piling more on. 3/4