Coronavirus: People with fever or persistent cough told to self-isolate

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Media captionBoris Johnson: “More families will lose loved ones before their time”

Anyone with a “new, continuous” cough or a high temperature is now advised to self-isolate for seven days, as the UK government moves to the “delay” phase of its plan to tackle coronavirus.

Schools have been advised to cancel trips abroad, and older people and those with pre-existing health concerns have been told not to go on cruises.

PM Boris Johnson said it was “the worst public health crisis for a generation”.

In total, 10 people have now died in the UK with the virus.

There have been 596 confirmed cases across the country. However, the actual number of people infected could be between 5,000 and 10,000, the government’s chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said.

As part of the new measures, testing will only focus on identifying people with the virus in hospital.

Speaking after an emergency Cobra meeting, Mr Johnson said: “Some people compare it to seasonal flu, alas that is not right. Owing to the lack of immunity, this disease is more dangerous.

“It is going to spread further and I must level with you, I must level with the British public, many more families are going to lose loved ones before their time.”

He said there was no need to close schools at the moment – as the Republic of Ireland did just hours earlier.

He explained: “The scientific advice is that this could do more harm than good at this time – but of course we are keeping this under review and this again may change as the disease spreads.”

Like other countries, the government is also considering calling for the suspension of major public events such as sporting fixtures – but this would be a measure primarily to protect public services.

“The scientific advice is this has little effect on the spread – but it does place a burden on other public services,” Mr Johnson said.

However, Scotland has said that mass gatherings of more than 500 people should be cancelled from next week, to reduce the burden on emergency services.

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A member of the public is swabbed at a drive-through coronavirus testing facility in Wolverhampton

The number of UK cases rose by more than 100 on Thursday, up from 456 on Wednesday – with 491 in England, 60 in Scotland, 20 in Northern Ireland and 25 in Wales.

As of 09:00 GMT, a total of 29,764 people had been tested for the virus in the UK.

The latest two deaths were an 89-year-old and a woman in her 60s – at two hospitals in London. They both had underlying health conditions.

Mr Johnson warned that the number of UK cases will “rise sharply”, and said the next phase of the government’s plan aimed to delay the spread of the virus “and thereby minimise suffering”.

He said even if the peak of the disease is delayed by a “few weeks” the NHS would be in a stronger position to handle it.

Why aren’t we closing schools and stadiums?

Other countries are closing schools, restricting movement and cancelling mass gatherings, such as football matches.

But health officials in the UK are taking a much more gradual, step-by-step approach. Why?

The obvious answer is that we have a relatively low number of cases so there is no need to take steps that will have profound social and economic consequences.

But we are also in this for the long haul. Countries taking drastic steps may well slow transmission. But how long can those steps be sustained?

At some point they have to be lifted and then the number of cases will rise.

If you can have some kind of controlled transmission, where the number of cases are kept low enough to allow the NHS to cope, is that a better way of managing it?

That’s certainly what the experts and ministers in the UK have decided. They believe it gives them the best chance of saving lives in the inevitable spread of the virus across the country.

Public Health England has released new guidance for those staying at home because they have symptoms of the virus – a cough or a temperature of 37,8C (100F) or more.

The advice states:

  • Not to go to work, school, or public areas, use public transport or taxis – or even for a walk
  • Those with even mild symptoms of infection should stay at least two metres away from other people in their homes, and should sleep alone
  • Those with confirmed or suspected cases should use a separate bathroom

Up to now, under the previous strategy of containment, people were told to self-isolate only if they had the cough and fever but had also been to an affected country recently, or had contact with someone who had tested positive for the virus.

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Media captionUp to 10,000 in UK “likely to have coronavirus” – chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance

The delay phase aims to lower the peak impact of the virus and push it away from the winter season – when pressures on the NHS are more acute because of issues including seasonal flu.

Delaying the outbreak’s impact could also buy time for the testing of drugs and development of vaccines and/or improved therapies or tests to help reduce the impact of the disease.


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