London, June 15: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday extended COVID-19 restrictions in England till July 19, which were earlier scheduled to be lifted on June 21, saying there was concern about the spread of Delta variant.
“We are so concerned by the Delta variant that is now spreading faster than the third wave that was predicted in the February roadmap. We are seeing cases growing by about 64 per cent per week and in the worst affected areas, it is doubling every week and the average number of people being admitted in a hospital has increased by 50 per cent week-on-week and by 61 per cent in the northwest which may be the shape of things to come,” Johnson told reporters at 10 Downing Street.┬аUK PM Boris Johnson To Delay Lifting COVID-19 Restrictions, Says тАШGovt Is Looking at the DataтАЩ.
“I think it is sensible to wait just a little longer. By Monday, July 19, we will aim to have double jabbed around two-thirds of the adult population, including everyone over 50, all the vulnerable, frontline, health and care workers and everyone over 40 who received their first dose in mid-May,” the British PM added.
Johnson said vaccination greatly reduces transmission and two doses provide high degree of protection against serious illness and deaths.
“Let’s be clear, we cannot simply eliminate COVID. We must learn to live with it. And with every day that goes by, we are better protected by the vaccines and we are better able to live with this disease. Vaccination greatly reduces transmission and two doses is provide a very high degree of protection against serious illness and deaths,” he said.
He also said that the link between hospitalisations and infections has weakened but not severed, adding that admissions in ICU wards were on a rise due to the Delta variant.
“We can simply keep going with all of step four on June 21 even though there is a real possibility that the virus will outrun the vaccines and thousands of deaths would ensue that could otherwise have been avoided. Or we can give the NHS a few more crucial weeks to get those remaining jabs into the arms of those who need them,” he said.
The UK has experienced a surge of new COVID-19 cases in recent weeks.
Nearly 7,500 new infections were recorded on Sunday across the UK, bringing the weekly tally to more than 50,000 — a near 50 per cent rise on the previous week.
This is despite the country having one of the highest vaccination rates in the world with 78.9 per cent of the adult population having received at least one dose and more than 56 per cent now fully inoculated.
(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, Today News 24 Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)