Can you think of anything that happened in 2020 which is still affecting huge swathes of people on an ongoing basis and which may help explain this worrying trend?
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If you haven’t figured it out yet, here’s a little clue… 🔎
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Still not worked it out?
Here’s another clue from Jim Reed, the BBC’s health reporter… 
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The government say they want to fix the benefits crisis…
…but to fix the benefits crisis, they’re going to have to fix the long-term sickness crisis…
…and to fix the long-term sickness crisis, they’re going to have to fix the Long Covid crisis…
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…and to fix the Long Covid crisis, they’re going to have to stop ignoring the highly infectious disease which causes it…
ie. COVID.
Every reinfection increases the risk of Long Covid.
And the best way to prevent Long Covid is to prevent Covid infections & reinfections.
Since Covid is predominantly spread via airborne aerosols which spread through a room like smoke and can linger in the air even after the infectious person has left the room, the best way to prevent Covid infections is to use mitigations against AIRBORNE transmission.
…and also in SCHOOLS where children are crammed into poorly-ventilated classrooms, sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with up to 29 other kids for around 6 hours a day, 5 days a week…
…where parents are told it’s perfectly ok to send their kids in with obvious Covid symptoms.
Analysis of NHS data by the RCEM, shows that from Jun-Sep 2025, over HALF A MILLION patients had an A&E stay of over 12 hours from their time of arrival in England.
This is MORE than the entire winter of 2021-22, during which the UK experienced one of the worst Covid waves.
In the latest weekly figures, there were 188 people Covid deaths across the UK.
“It's an uncontroversial statement from an epidemiological point of view to say that improving ventilation in schools would be a good thing […] The advantages of ventilation are very substantial.”
So why aren’t we doing it?
Data from the national schools air quality monitoring project (SAMHE) shows that ventilation rates in schools drop to just 3.8 litres per sec per person in colder weather.
This is far BELOW the minimum UK guidance of 5-8 litres per sec per person.
For more clips from Prof Chris Whitty’s appearance at the Covid Inquiry today, please take a look at this excellent thread from Clinically Vulnerable Families (@cv_cev):
Why do schools need to tackle poor VENTILATION in classrooms?
Because nationwide monitoring of UK classrooms shows that ventilation drops to appallingly low levels when outdoor temperatures drop & windows are closed.
Poor ventilation means airborne viruses spread like wildfire.