English: The British Corony’s crisis can return surprisingly and the country has not come out of the forest, the head of the medical officer Chris Whitty said on Thursday in front of the lifting of legal restrictions.
The government removed most of the landsmen restrictions in the UK from July 19, said the quick launch of the Covid-19 vaccine was largely violated the relationship between infection and serious illness or death.
Whitty said that the time of doubling hospitalization is around three weeks, and that low number of people in hospitals with Covid-19 can now rise to a serious level for the next few months.
“It doesn’t need a lot of doubling until we really are quite scary numbers, I don’t think we have to underestimate the fact that we can get a problem surprisingly quickly,” Whitty said at the webinar on Thursday held by the Thursday Museum of Science.
“We don’t mean out of the forest, we are in a much better condition because of the vaccine program, and drugs and various other things.” The British has the highest death toll in the world but two-thirds of the adult population has been fully vaccinated.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged people to be careful when England moved to Steptember 4 – late sidewalk Lockdown Legal – on Monday.
This means the last business remaining is still closed, including the nightclub, it can finally be reopened.
Johnson acknowledged the wave of infection and more unavoidable deaths when restrictions ended, but said worse losses would come from keeping the economy closed.
However, self-isolation requirements for people exposed to positive cases can inhibit the economy too, with more than 48,000 cases reported on Thursday.
More than 520,000 contacts containing warnings were sent through the application in a week until July 7, and Karan Bilimoria, President of the England Industry Confederation (CBI), said it was a serious situation.
“On Monday we will have a situation where on the one hand we open the economy, on the other hand we close the economy,” he told LBC Radio.
“The hospitality sector, 20% of staff isolating, health services up to 25% of non-existent staff, and pending buses and trains.
This cannot continue.
This destroys the economy.”