COVID-19 pandemic in England

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COVID-19 pandemic in England
File:COVID-19 outbreak England per capita cases map.svg
Confirmed cases per 100,000 residents by lower tier local authority area
Disease COVID-19
Virus strain SARS-CoV-2
Deaths 43646[1][2]
Confirmed cases 612846[1][3]
Official website
UK Government

The COVID-19 pandemic was first confirmed to have spread to England with two cases among Chinese nationals staying in a hotel in York on 31 January 2020. The two main public bodies responsible for health in England are NHS England and Public Health England. NHS England oversees the budget, planning, delivery and day-to-day operation of the commissioning side of the NHS in England while PHE's mission is "to protect and improve the nation’s health and to address inequalities". As of 18 October 2020, there have been 612,846 total cases and 38,711 deaths in England.[1]

Timeline

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January 2020

On 31 January, two members of a family of Chinese nationals staying in a hotel in York, one of whom studied at the University of York, became the first confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the UK. Upon confirmation, they were transferred from Hull University Teaching Hospital to a specialist isolation facility, a designated High Consequence Infectious Diseases Unit in Newcastle upon Tyne's Royal Victoria Infirmary.[4][5]

On the same day, an evacuation flight from Wuhan landed at RAF Brize Norton and the passengers, none of whom were showing symptoms, were taken to quarantine, in a staff residential block at Arrowe Park Hospital on the Wirral.[6] There had previously been contention over whether the government should assist the repatriation of UK passport holders from the most affected areas in China, or restrict travel from affected regions altogether.[7][8] Some British nationals in Wuhan had been informed that they could be evacuated but any spouses or children with mainland Chinese passports could not.[9] This was later overturned, but the delay meant that some people missed the flight.[6][10]

February 2020

On 6 February, a third confirmed case, a man who had recently travelled to Singapore prior to visiting a ski resort in the Haute-Savoie, France, was reported in Brighton. He had been the source of infection to six of his relatives during a stay in France, before returning to the UK on 28 January.[11][12] Following confirmation of his result, the UK's CMOs expanded the number of countries where a history of previous travel associated with flu-like symptoms – such as fever, cough and difficulty breathing – in the previous 14 days would require self-isolation and calling NHS 111. These countries included China, Hong Kong, Japan, Macau, Malaysia, Republic of Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand.[13]

On 10 February, the total number of cases in the UK reached eight as four further cases were confirmed in people linked to the affected man from Brighton.[14][15] Globally, the virus had spread to 28 countries.[16] On the morning of 10 February, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Matt Hancock, announced the Health Protection (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020, to give public health professionals "strengthened powers" to keep affected people and those believed to be a possible risk of having the virus, in isolation.[16] That day, the Arrowe Park Hospital, Merseyside, and the Kents Hill Park hotel and conference centre, Milton Keynes became designated isolation units.[17][16] The following day, two of the eight confirmed cases in the UK were reported by BBC News to be general practitioners.[14] A ninth case was confirmed in London on 11 February.[18]

March 2020

On 1 March, further cases were reported in Greater Manchester, some of them believed to be contacts of the case in Surrey who had no history of travel abroad.[19][20]

On 2 March, four further people in England tested positive. All had recently travelled from Italy; they are from Hertfordshire, Devon and Kent.[17] The total number of UK cases was reported as having reached 40, though this was revised to 39 after additional testing.[21] The following day, when the total number of confirmed cases in the UK stood at 51, the UK government unveiled their Coronavirus Action Plan, which outlined what the UK had done already and what it planned to do next.[17]

On 2 March, the first coronavirus death occurred in a care home, but at that time care home data were not yet published.[22]

On 3 March, the first three hospital deaths were reported in Nottingham, Essex, and Buckinghamshire.[22]

On 15 March, the COVID-19 Hospitalisation in England Surveillance System (CHESS) was initiated across all NHS Trusts.

On 17 March, NHS England announced that all non-urgent operations in England would be postponed from 15 April to free up 30,000 beds.[23] Also on 17 March, Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced that £330bn would be made available in loan guarantees for businesses affected by the pandemic.[24]

On 18 March, over 750 patients were in hospital with COVID-19. This number rapidly grew and by 31 March was more than 10,750.[25] Admissions to hospital grew from less than 700 a day on 20 March to more than 2,400 a day by 31 March.[25] By 31 March almost 4,500 patients had died in hospital.[26] Taken together, these data suggest that more than 7,000 patients were discharged from hospital in March.

By 20 March, genome sequencing had identified ten viral lineages of COVID-19 in England (A, B, B1, B10, B10.2, B11, B12.1, B5, B8, B9). The research, which was at an early stage, concluded that the data were consistent with a large number of independent introductions into the UK, from multiple places around the world, particularly Italy and other European countries. It was very likely that the true number of independent introductions was substantially higher.[27]

By 31 March, England was the worst affected country in the United Kingdom with over 21,000 confirmed infections[28] and at least 3,850 deaths in hospital.[26]


ONS data for England and Wales suggests that by 31 March, England had seen over 200 COVID-19 deaths in care homes and more than 200 deaths at home.[29]

April 2020

On 2 April the maximum number of hospital admissions in a day (around 3,000 patients) was reached;[25] the number of hospital deaths was now around 600 a day.[26]

On 12 April the number of patients in hospital peaked at 17,172 and the number of daily admissions due to COVID-19 had reduced to less than 1,900; more than 700 hospital deaths were recorded.[25]

Up to 24 April, ONS death registrations for England and Wales showed 19,643 had occurred in hospital, 5,890 in care homes, 1,306 in private homes and 301 in hospices.[29] Of these deaths, 1,149 occurred in Wales.

On 29 April the method of reporting deaths in England was changed.[30] Data from three sources are now cross checked against the list of people who have had a diagnosis of COVID-19 confirmed by a Public Health England or NHS laboratory. The three sources are:[30]

  1. data supplied to NHS England by the Hospital Trusts,
  2. data from Public Health England Health Protection teams (mainly deaths not in hospitals),
  3. Information obtained by linking the Second Generation Surveillance System (SGSS) to the NHS Demographic Batch Service.

After checking, the records are merged into one database and duplicates removed so there is no double counting.

The new method of counting deaths results in higher numbers than the previous method. On 29 April the total of deaths reported by NHS England was 21,400.[26] The new method identified 23,550 deaths of people who had a positive test result confirmed by a PHE or NHS laboratory.[citation needed]

The number of patients with COVID-19 in hospital steadily reduced until on 30 April it was around 11,250;[25] at least 54,100 patients were admitted to hospital in April.[25] The total number of deaths in hospital during April exceeded 17,500;[26]. these data suggest that there were more than 37,000 patient discharges in April.

May 2020

By 3 May, daily admissions to hospital had further reduced to around 1000, while discharges continued to exceed admissions and thus the number of people in hospital was now around 10,500.[25]

An app for the adult social care workforce in England was launched on 6 May to support workers during the COVID-19 outbreak. The Care Workforce app was developed by NHSX and the NHS Business Services Authority.[31] The GMB union told members not to use the app, saying that managers could identify staff who had complained about pay, testing and personal protective equipment through a chat feature.[32]

On 6 May the number of people in hospital fell below 10,000 and the total number of deaths in hospital since 1 March had grown to at least 23,300.[26]

On 11 May the COVID Alert Levels were published by the Government[33] and many restrictions in England were eased; people who were unable to work from home were encouraged to return to work, but where possible avoid public transport.[34]

By 15 May the number of hospital patients was below 8,000 and daily admissions were around 700.[25]

On 21 May the lockdown lockdown rules were amended in England to allow people to meet one other person from another household, outdoors, but to remain 2 m (6 ft) apart. Outdoor sports such as golf or tennis were allowed with members of your household or with one other person from another household, while maintaining social distancing. Households were allowed to drive any distance in England to destinations such as parks and beaches but not to Wales or Scotland.[35]

On 27 May, Matt Hancock announced NHS Test and Trace would begin operations the following day.[36]

The number of patients in hospital with COVID-19 continued to reduce and on 31 May was around 5,200.[25] During the month at least 22,400 patients were admitted to hospital with COVID-19,[25] the number of hospital deaths was around 5,200[26] and around 22,900 patients were discharged.[25]

June 2020

A study published on 8 June which included genome sequencing data[37] concluded that in mid to late February travel from Italy resulted in the majority of importations. By 1 March this had changed to Spain and by mid-March it changed again to France; because of the travel restrictions imposed, importations after mid April were at very low levels. It was estimated that around half of the importations were by UK nationals returning to the UK. In the period up to 3 May, approximately 34% of detected UK transmission lineages arrived via travel from Spain, 29% from France, 14% from Italy and 23% from other countries. Less than 0.1% were from China.

By 15 June the number of people in hospital had fallen steadily to around 3,500 and daily admissions were down to around 350,[25] but each day there were still around 50 deaths reported.[26]

On 30 June the government imposed the first local lockdown in the UK after 10% of all positive cases in the UK over the past week were found in Leicester. Non-essential shops in the city had to close, and the public houses and restaurants hoping to reopen on 4 July had to delay opening for at least two weeks; schools would also be shut for most pupils.[38]

By 30 June daily COVID-19 hospital admissions were fewer than 200[25] and COVID-19 daily deaths in hospital were around 30;[26] the total number in hospital with COVID-19 was fewer than 2,500.[25]

July 2020

On Friday 24 July 2020 new regulations made it compulsory to wear face coverings in most indoor shops, shopping centres, banks, post offices and public transport hubs. Those breaking the rules could be fined up to £100. Face coverings remained optional in other indoor public places including museums, cinemas and hairdressers. Excluded from the regulations were venues where wearing a mask might be 'impractical', such as restaurants and gyms. Exemptions were available for children under 11, individuals with physical or mental illness or disability, and for anyone to whom it would cause significant distress.[39]

On 24 July it was reported that, as a result of the pandemic and job losses, almost 1,000 people applied to a restaurant in Manchester advertising a vacancy for a receptionist.[40]

Indoor gyms and pools started to re-open on 25 July.[41]

During July the number of COVID-19 hospital admissions fell to around 3,050,[25] the number of deaths in hospital from COVID-19 fell to 480,[26] and around 4,000 patients with the disease were discharged from hospitals.[25]

August 2020

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. August saw the lowest number of hospital admissions at 1,600[25] and hospital deaths (200);[26] the number of patients in hospital on 31st August was less than 500.[25] Throughout August the daily hospital death rate was essentially in single digits.[26]

September 2020

On 2 September the minimum number of hospital patients since the start of the pandemic was recorded (425), hospital admissions were around 50 a day at the start of the month.[25] Up until the 12 September, the number of deaths in hospital was in single digits but for the second half of the month it was around 20 a day.[26]

On 8 September, following a rise in case numbers, the government published new social distancing rules to come into effect in England from 14 September. These restricted gatherings of separate households to groups of six or few people (the so-called "rule of six"), excluding work or educational settings.[42] By 18 September, the COVID Symptom Study estimated the R_0 value in England to be 1.4, meaning that cases were doubling every seven days.[43]

Hospital admissions in September were over 5,850,[25] there were around 500 deaths[26] and 3,800 discharges.[25]

October 2020

Between July and September 2020, ever more extensive and increasingly rigorous ad hoc local regulations were introduced, which in many areas proved unsuccessful in controlling spread of the virus.[44] In England all of these local regulations were swept away on 14 October 2020, and were replaced by the tier regulations.

Hospital death statistics

Percentage deaths in hospital up to 16 June showed that those with a pre-existing condition were around nineteen times more likely to die than those who did not have one. Age and sex also influenced the risk of death, with men between 60 and 79 showing a death rate almost double that of women. Men over 80 were over 20% more likely to die than women in the same age group.[45]

Deaths by Condition and Sex
Age range Pre-condition No Known Pre-condition Female Male
0-19 years 0.05% 0.01% 0.02% 0.04%
20-39 years 0.61% 0.12% 0.31% 0.42%
40-59 years 6.86% 0.93% 2.63 5.16%
60-79 years 36.04% 1.99% 13.09% 24.94%
80+ years 51.63% 1.75% 23.14% 30.23%

The number of deaths by ethenicity is being fully investigated but it would appear that certain groups are more likely to die after contracting COVID-19.

Deaths by Ethnicity
Ethnic Group Percentage
White 76%
Mixed background 1%
Indian 3%
Pakistani 2%
Bangladeshi 1%
Caribbean 2%
African 2%
Any other Black background 1%
Chinese 0%
Any other ethnic group 2%

ONS data

The Office of National Statistics publishes data on weekly deaths from COVID-19 in a number of categories including by place of occurrence.[46] These data give the number of deaths recorded in England during a seven-day period; the total number of deaths will be greater as there is normally a delay between the day of death and when it is recorded. The majority of deaths have been in hospital (63%) but deaths in care homes was also very high (30%). The percentage deaths in each setting has remained essentially constant since mid June.

Deaths by Place of Occurrence[46]
Week Ending Home Hospital Hospice Care Home Other communal Elsewhere Total
13 March - 5 - - - - 5
20 March 1 97 - 2 - - 100
27 March 14 480 2 18 - 1 515
3 April 111 2,985 29 187 3 15 3,330
10 April 309 4,727 51 768 17 27 5,899
17 April 398 5,851 103 1,929 34 40 8,335
24 April 402 4,564 107 2,669 40 24 7,806
1 May 236 3,043 84 2,329 36 20 5,748
8 May 148 1,859 75 1,590 22 22 3,716
15 May 141 1,800 57 1,592 25 9 3,624
22 May 101 1,238 58 1,046 6 6 2,455
29 May 65 942 27 670 6 5 1,715
5 June 74 841 26 536 9 2 1,488
12 June 47 622 20 360 5 3 1,057
19 June 49 431 20 242 - 2 744
26 June 28 356 7 181 - 2 574
3 July 33 282 14 163 2 3 497
10 July 34 210 7 89 1 3 344
17 July 28 157 6 91 1 1 284
24 July 24 109 6 67 2 1 209
31 July 14 120 4 44 - 1 183
7 August 11 85 3 29 - - 128
14 August 10 71 4 39 - 1 125
21 August 13 67 4 39 1 2 126
28 August 9 63 1 23 - 1 97
4 September 6 48 2 17 1 - 74
11 September 7 62 - 27 - 1 97
18 September 8 94 2 30 - - 134
Total 2,321 31,204 719 14,777 211 192 49,409
Percentage 4.7 63.1 1.5 29.9 0.4 0.4 100.0

The difference between the 'All recorded deaths' and 'COVID-19 deaths' allows the 'All other Deaths' to be compared with the '5 Year Average' data. Up to, and including, the week ending 13 March, the number of deaths in England was on average 414 fewer each week than the five-year average. For eight weeks commencing 27 March the 'All Other Deaths' total exceeded the '5 Yr Average'; the differences between the 5 year average and the 'All Other Deaths', which in late September was around 7000, remains unresolved. The Friday Bank Holiday in the week ending 8 May would be expected to significantly reduce the number of deaths recorded (approximately 1900) with a corresponding increase the following week. The data may have been influenced by the late May Bank Holiday but as this was on a Monday it would have significantly less effect. .[46]

Registered Deaths in England[46]
Week Ending All Recorded Deaths COVID-19 Deaths All Other Deaths 5 Year Average No.
13 March 10,317 5 10,312 10,447
20 March 9,903 100 9,803 9,842
27 March 10,412 515 9,897 9,413
3 April 15,443 3,330 12,113 9,599
10 April 17,563 5,899 11,664 9,806
17 April 21,157 8,335 12,822 9,787
24 April 20,841 7,806 13,035 9,767
1 May 17,004 5,748 11,256 9,291
8 May 11,946 3,716 8,230 8,938
15 May 13,783 3,624 10,159 9,525
22 May 11,586 2,455 9,131 9,300
29 May 9,228 1,715 7,513 7,608
5 June 9,995 1,488 8,507 9,346
12 June 9,391 1,057 8,334 8,803
19 June 8,716 744 7,972 8,810
26 June 8,414 574 7,840 8,695
3 July 8,542 497 8,045 8,607
10 July 8,103 344 7,759 8,648
17 July 8,262 284 7,978 8,502
24 July 8,317 209 8,108 8,452
31 July 8,404 183 8,221 8,437
7 August 8,365 128 8,237 8,502
14 August 8,767 125 8,642 8,492
21 August 9,021 126 8,895 8,562
28 August 8,425 97 8,328 7,673
4 September 7,232 74 7,158 8,605
11 September 9,215 97 9,118 8,709
18 September 8,955 134 8,821 8,663
Total 307,307 49,409 257,898 250,829
registered COVID-19 Deaths in England and Wales by Age Range[47]
Age range (years) All (%) Male (%) Female (%)
0-39 0.6 0.6 0.5
40-44 0.5 0.6 0.4
45-49 0.9 1.0 0.8
50-54 1.7 2.0 1.4
55-59 2.9 3.5 2.1
60-64 4.1 4.9 3.1
65-69 5.6 6.6 4.3
70-74 9.2 10.7 7.3
75+ 74.6 70.1 80.2

Regulations and legislation

File:Restaurant in London offering home deliveries during the Coronavirus pandemic March 2020.jpg
Restaurant in London offering home deliveries after dining-in was banned. March 2020.

The government published the Health Protection (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020 on 10 February 2020, a statutory instrument covering the legal framework behind the government's initial containment and isolation strategies and its organisation of the national reaction to the virus for England.[48] Other published regulations include changes to Statutory Sick Pay (into force on 13 March),[49] and changes to Employment and Support Allowance and Universal Credit (also 13 March).[50]

On 19 March, the government introduced the Coronavirus Act 2020, which grants the government discretionary emergency powers in the areas of the NHS, social care, schools, police, the Border Force, local councils, funerals and courts.[51] The act received royal assent on 25 March 2020.[52] Closures to pubs, restaurants and indoor sports and leisure facilities were imposed via The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Business Closure) (England) Regulations 2020 (SI 327).[53]

On 23 March the Government announced a number of restrictions on movement some of which were later enacted into law,[54] these included:

  1. Shopping for basic necessities, as infrequently as possible;
  2. One form of exercise a day - for example a run, walk, or cycle - alone or with members of your household (was not enacted in law);
  3. Any medical need, to provide care or to help a vulnerable person;
  4. Travelling to and from work, but only where this is absolutely necessary and cannot be done from home.

The full regulations are detailed in:

Local lockdown regulations

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In England, up until 14th October 2020 most of the COVID-19 lockdown regulations covered the whole country, but some local areas of particular concern are or have been subject to more restrictive rules at various times, namely Leicester, Luton, Blackburn with Darwen, Bradford, Tameside, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Trafford, Wigan, Pendle, Hyndburn, Burnley, Calderdale and Kirklees. In most cases, the effect of the local regulations had been to slow down the gradual easing of the lockdown regulations which applied to the rest of the country.

Tier regulations

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In England the local lockdown regulations were swept away on 14 October 2020, and were replaced by the COVID-19 tier regulations in England. The restrictions are enforced by three statutory instruments, as follows:

  • "Tier 1": The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Local COVID-19 Alert Level) (Medium) (England) Regulations 2020 (SI 2020/1103)
  • "Tier 2": The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Local COVID-19 Alert Level) (High) (England) Regulations 2020 (SI 2020/1104)
  • "Tier 3": The Health Protection (Coronavirus, Local COVID-19 Alert Level) (Very High) (England) Regulations 2020 (SI 2020/1105)

These are referred to as the 'tier regulations".

The regulations relate to England only.

Impact

Finance and the economy

During the second half of March, 1 million British workers applied for the Universal Credit benefit scheme.[57][58] On 20 March the government announced a Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, where it would offer grants to companies to pay 80% of a staff wage each month up to a total of £2,500 per a person, if companies kept staff on their payroll. The scheme would cover three months' wages and would be backdated to the start of March.[59] Following a three-week extension of the countrywide lockdown the scheme was extended until the end of June 2020.[60][61] Initially the scheme was only for those workers who started work at their company on or before 28 February 2020; this was later changed to 19 March 2020, the day before the scheme was announced, allowing 200,000 additional workers to be part of it.[62] On the first day of operation 140,000 companies used the scheme.[63] Later the scheme was extended until the end of October with the Chancellor saying that from August companies would have to contribute towards the 80% of employees wages that the government was covering. It was stated that the scheme was costing £14 billion a month to run, with nearly a quarter of all workers in Britain furloughed by their employers within two weeks of the start of the scheme.[64] The decision to extended the job retention scheme was made to avoid mass redundancies, company bankruptcies and potential unemployment levels not seen since the 1930s.[65]

In March the Self Employed Income Support Scheme (SEISS) was announced.[66] The scheme paid a grant worth 80% of self employed profits profits up to £2,500 each month, for companies whose trading profit was less than £50,000 in the 2018-19 financial year or averaged less than £50,000 over the last three financial tax years. Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC) were tasked with contacting those who were eligible and the grant was taxable. The government also had announced a six-month delay on tax payments. Self employed workers who pay themselves a salary and dividends are not covered by the scheme and instead had to apply for the job retention scheme.[67] The scheme went live on 13 May.[68] The scheme went live ahead of schedule and people were invited to claim on a specific date between 13 and 18 May based on their Unique Tax Reference number. Claimants would receive their money by 25 May or within six days of a completed claim.[69] By 15 May, more than 1 million self employed people had applied to the scheme.[70]

The government announced Retail, Hospitality and Leisure Grant Fund (RHLGF) and changes to the Small Business Grant Fund (SBGF) on 17 March. The SBGF was changed from £3,000 to £10,000, while the RHLGF offered grants of up to £25,000.[71][72][73] £12.33 billion in funding was committed to the SBGF and the RHLGF schemes with another £617 million added at the start of May.[74] By 25 April only around 50% of eligible business had received funding.[75]

On 23 March the Government announced the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CBILS) for small and medium-sized businesses and Covid Corporate Financing Facility for large companies.[76] The government banned banks from seeking personal guarantees on Coronavirus Business Interruption loans under £250,000 following complaints.[77][78] Coronavirus Large Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CLBILS) was announced on 3 April and later tweaked to include more companies.[78][79] In May the amount a company could borrow on the scheme was raised from £50 million to £200 million. Restrictions were put in place on companies on the scheme including dividends payout and bonuses to members of the board.[80] On 20 April the Government announced a scheme worth £1.25 billion to support innovative new companies that could not claim for coronavirus rescue schemes.[81] The government additionally announced the Bounce Back Loan Scheme (BBLS) for small and medium size businesses. The scheme offered loans of up to £50,000 and was interest free for the first year before an interest rate of 2.5% a year was applied, with the loan being paid back within six years. Businesses who had an existing CBILS loan of up to £50,000 could transfer on to this scheme, but had to do so by 4 November 2020. The scheme launched on 4 May.[82][83] The loan was 100% guaranteed by the government and was designed to be simpler than the CBILS scheme.[84] More than 130,000 BBLS applications were received by banks on the first day of operation with more than 69,500 being approved.[85][84] On 13 May the Government announced that it was under writing Trade credit insurance, to prevent businesses struggling in the pandemic from having no insurance cover.[86][87] On 12 May almost £15 billion of state aid had been given to businesses.[88] The Treasury and the Bank of England on 17 March announced the Covid Corporate Financing Facility (CCFF).[89][90]

The Resolution Foundation surveyed 6,000 workers, and concluded that 30% of those in the lowest income bracket had been affected by the pandemic compared with 10% of those in the top fifth of earners.[91] The foundation said that about a quarter of 18 to 24-year-olds included in the research had been furloughed whilst another 9% had lost their job altogether. They also said that 35 to 44 year olds were least likely to be furloughed or lose their jobs with only around 15% of the surveyed population having experienced these outcomes.[92] Earlier research by the Institute for Fiscal Studies concluded that young people (those under 25) and women were more likely to be working in a shutdown business sector.[93]

The Guardian reported that after the government had suspended the standard tender process so contracts could to be issued "with extreme urgency", over a billion pounds of state contracts had been awarded under the new fast-track rules. The contracts were to provide food parcels, personal protective equipment (PPE) and assist in operations. The largest contract was handed to Edenred by the Department for Education, it was worth £234 million and was for the replacement of free school meals.[94]

National health service response

Appointments and self-isolation

In March, hospitals in England began to cancel all elective procedures.[95] On 22 March, the government announced that it would be asking about 1.5 million people (everyone in England with certain health conditions that carry serious risk if infected) to "shield" for 12 weeks. They were to be notified by mail or text messaged by their NHS general practitioners, and provided deliveries of medication, food, and household essentials, delivered by pharmacists and local governments, and at least initially paid for by the UK government.[96] Members of the public were told to stay at home, should they suspect they have symptoms of COVID-19, and not visit a GP, pharmacy, or hospital.[97] For advice, the public were told to use a dedicated online self-assessment form before calling NHS 111, the non-emergency medical helpline.[98]

To allow vulnerable patients with underlying conditions to still be able to attend for routine blood tests without having to come to a hospital, from 8 April, the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust opened a drive-through phlebotomy service operating out of a tent in the car park of Sheffield Arena.[99] This allows patients to have their blood tests taken from within their car, in a similar manner to how COVID-19 swabbing drive-through stations work. Following the success of the service, it was expanded to cover all patients registered with any GP in the Sheffield area from 27 April.[100]

Beds

NHS England freed up 30,000 beds by discharging patients who were well enough and by delaying non-emergency treatment,[101] and acquired use of 8,000 beds in private sector facilities.[101] Emergency building work was undertaken to add capacity to existing hospitals, 52 beds in Wigan, for example.[102] An additional capacity of almost 20,000 beds was created with NHS Nightingale Hospitals in major conurbations across the United Kingdom.[citation needed] Only a small amount of the capacity was used, and most of the hospitals were put on standby as the situation progressed.

On 18 October 2020, The Guardian reported that according to the National Health Service (NHS) report, the Greater Manchester is at risk of running out of hospital beds during the pandemic. NHS data revealed that before Friday 211 of the 257 critical care beds were occupied in Greater Manchester, and 82% of the total supply was in use by Covid-positive people or people admitted for other critical cases.[103]

Law and order

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In March, police forces in each nation of the UK were given powers to arrest and fine citizens who broke lockdown rules.[104][105][106][107][108] The National Police Chiefs' Council said police had issued their first fines for people breaking lockdown rules on 27 March. The fixed penalty notices were £60 but would be reduced to £30 if paid within 14 days.[109] By 31 March, some police forces and individual officers, were being criticised by a variety of people including,[110] former Supreme Court judge Lord Sumption,[111][112] former Justice secretary David Gauke,[110] former Chancellor George Osborne and privacy and civil liberties group Big Brother Watch for over-zealous and incorrect application of the new powers.[110][113] New guidance was released by the National Police Chiefs Council.[111][114]

According to data from the National Police Chiefs' Council, around 9,000 people were issued fines for breaking lockdown rules in England and Wales, between 27 March and 27 April.[115] National Police Chiefs’ Council figures from 27 March to 11 May (the date when fines in England increased[116]) showed that more than 14,000 fines were issued for breaking lockdown rules in England and Wales. There were 862 repeat offenders in the figures with one person fined 9 times. The Easter weekend (11 and 12 April) had the highest amount of fines issued within the period. The crown prosecution service stated 56 people were wrongly charged with offences related to the pandemic. This was mainly due to Welsh regulations being applied in England and vice versa.[117][118][119]

There have been reports of hate incidents against Italian and Chinese persons and a Singaporean student was assaulted in London in an attack that police linked to coronavirus fears.[120][121] In addition there have been reports of young people deliberately coughing and spitting in the faces of people, including an incident involving health workers.[122][123][124][125][126]

On 9 May, Police broke up an anti-lockdown protest took place in London consisting of around 40 people. It was thought to be the first such protest in the UK following protests in other nations.[127] It was reported that around 60 protests had been planned on the weekend of the 16 May, with police saying that they were preparing to break them up.[128] Protests took place in London and Southampton, with several protesters arrested and fined at the London demonstration.[129]

In October, police broke up a wedding with 100 guests at the Tudor Rose, Southall, breaking social isolation laws. A police spokesman said the owner could be fined £10,000.[130]

Fraud

During the contact tracing app trial on the Isle of Wight the Chartered Trading Standards Institute found evidence of a phishing scam. In the scam recipients would receive a text stating that they had been in contact with someone with COVID-19 and were directed to a website to input their personal details.[131] Local councils found fake goods being sold including testing kits, face masks and hand sanitiser. There had also been reports of scams involving the replacement school meals scheme and incidents of people posing as government officials, council staff or IT workers.[132]

Courts and prisons

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. On 17 March, trials lasting longer than three days were postponed until May in England and Wales, Those cases already running would continue in the hope of reaching a conclusion.[133][134]

The government released specific guidance to prisons in the event of coronavirus symptoms or cases, specifically the rule that "any prisoner or detainee with a new, continuous cough or a high temperature should be placed in protective isolation for 7 days".[135] There are around 83,000 prisoners in England and Wales.[136] On 24 March, the Ministry of Justice announced that prison visits would be suspended and that inmates would be confined to their cells.[137] In order to maintain communication between prisoners and their families, the government promised 900 secure phones to 55 prisons, with calls being monitored and time-limited.[138] In a committee meeting on the same day, Justice Secretary Robert Buckland suggested that 50 pregnant inmates might be given early release, and another 9,000 inmates awaiting trial could be transferred to bail hostels.[139] On 14 April, the Ministry of Justice ordered 500 modular buildings, reportedly adapted from shipping containers, to provide additional single prison cell accommodation at seven prisons: HMPs North Sea Camp, Littlehey, Hollesley Bay, Highpoint, Moorland, Lindholme and Humber.[140] Following a COVID-19 case in HMP Manchester, public services think tank Reform called for the release of 2,305 "low-risk" offenders on short sentences to reduce the risk of coronavirus on the prison population.[141][142] Former justice secretary David Gauke echoed similar sentiments, citing the "churn" of prisoners going in and out of prison as a risk.[143] Up to 4,000 prisoners in England and Wales are to be released.[144] Amnesty International's Europe Deputy Director of Research said that authorities in UK should consider releasing those who are more vulnerable to COVID-19.[145]

On 18 March, the first coronavirus case was reported within the UK prison population. The prisoner, who had been serving time in HMP Manchester (commonly referred to as Strangeways), was moved to a hospital. While no other prisoners or staff tested positive for the virus, thirteen prisoners and four members of staff were put into isolation as a precaution.[146] On 26 March, it was reported that an 84-year-old sex offender had died from COVID-19 on 22 March at HMP Littlehey in Cambridgeshire, becoming the first inmate in the UK to die from the virus.[136] On 28 April, Public Health England had identified around 2,000 "possible/probable" and confirmed COVID-19 cases; outbreaks had occurred in 75 different institutions, with 35 inmates treated in hospital and 15 deaths.[147]

Aviation

From the latter half of January, Heathrow Airport received additional clinical support and tightened surveillance of the three direct flights it receives from Wuhan every week; each were to be met by a Port Health team.[148] Later, airlines including British Airways and Ryanair announced a number of flight cancellations for March.[21]

On 25 March, London City Airport announced it would temporarily close due to the coronavirus outbreak.[149] Heathrow Airport closed one runway from 6 April, while Gatwick Airport closed one of its two terminals, and said its runway would open for scheduled flights only between 2:00 pm and 10:00 pm.[150]

Public transport

On 20 March, Southeastern became the first train operating company to announce a reduced timetable, which would come into use from 23 March.[151]

On 19 March, the Stagecoach Supertram light rail network in Sheffield announced that they would be switching to a modified Sunday service from 23 March until further notice.[152] Local bus operators First South Yorkshire and Stagecoach Yorkshire, which operate across the same area, announced that they would also be switching to a reduced timetable from 23 March.[153] National Express suspended all its long-distance coach services from 6 April.[154]

Transport for London (TfL) services were reduced in stages. All Night Overground and Night Tube services, as well as all services on the Waterloo & City line, were suspended from 20 March, and 40 tube stations were closed on the same day.[155] The Mayor of London and TfL urged people to use public transport only if absolutely essential, so it could be used by critical workers.[156]

In April, TfL trialled changes encouraging passengers to board London buses by the middle or rear doors to lessen the risks to drivers, after the deaths of 14 TfL workers including nine drivers.[157] This measure was extended to all routes on 20 April, and passengers were no longer required to pay, so they did not need to use the card reader near the driver.[158]

On 22 April, London mayor Sadiq Khan warned that TfL could run out of money to pay staff by the end of April unless the government stepped in.[159] Since London entered lockdown on 23 March, Tube journeys had fallen by 95% and bus journeys by 85%.[160] On 7 May, it was reported that TfL had requested £2 billion in state aid to keep services running until September 2020.[161] on 12 May, TfL documents warned it expected to lose £4bn due to the pandemic and said it needed £3.2bn to balance a proposed emergency budget for 2021, having lost 90% of its overall income. Without an agreement with the government, deputy mayor for transport Heidi Alexander said TfL might have to issue a 'section 114 notice' - the equivalent of a public body becoming bankrupt.[162] On 14 May, the UK Government agreed £1.6bn in emergency funding to keep Tube and bus services running until September.[163]

In April, Govia Thameslink Railway re-branded three trains with special liveries to show its support for the NHS and the 200,000 essential workers commuting on GTR's network every week.[164]

British Armed Forces

The coronavirus pandemic affected British military deployments at home and abroad. Training exercises, including those in Canada and Kenya, had to be cancelled to free up personnel for the COVID Support Force.[165] The British training mission in Iraq, part of Operation Shader, had to be down-scaled.[166] An air base supporting this military operation also confirmed nine cases of coronavirus.[167] The British Army paused face-to-face recruitment and basic training operations, instead conducting them virtually.[168] Training locations, such as Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and HMS Raleigh, had to adapt their passing out parades. Cadets involved were made to stand 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) apart in combat dress and there were no spectators in the grandstands.[169][170] Ceremonial duties, such as the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace and the Gun Salute for the Queen's Official Birthday were either scaled-down or cancelled.[171][172] The Royal Air Force suspended all displays of its teams and bands, with some replaced by virtual displays.[173][174] The British Army deployed two experts to NATO to help counter disinformation around the pandemic.[175]

Elsewhere in defence, air shows, including the Royal International Air Tattoo at RAF Fairford, were cancelled.[176] Civilian airports, including Birmingham Airport, were used to practice transferring Coronavirus patients to local hospitals via helicopter.[177][178] Several defence and aerospace companies contributed to the national effort to produce more ventilators.[179] BAE Systems, the country's largest defence company, also loaned its Warton Aerodrome site to be used as a temporary morgue.[180] The Government's defence and security review, named the Integrated Review, was delayed.[181]

The armed forces assisted in the transportation of coronavirus patients in some of the country's remotest regions, such as Shetland and the Isles of Scilly.[182][183] On 23 March 2020, Joint Helicopter Command began assisting the coronavirus relief effort by transporting people and supplies. Helicopters were based at RAF Leeming to cover Northern England and Scotland, whilst helicopters based at RAF Benson, RAF Odiham and RNAS Yeovilton supported the Midlands and Southern England.[184]

On 24 March 2020, the armed forces helped plan and construct a field hospital at the ExCeL London conference centre, named NHS Nightingale Hospital London. Further critical care field hospitals were later built with military assistance in Birmingham, Manchester, Harrogate, Bristol, Exeter, Washington and Glasgow. These hospitals were staffed by military medics, alongside the NHS.[185][186]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Cumulative total as of 18 October 2020
  3. Cumulative total as of 18 October 2020
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  26. 26.00 26.01 26.02 26.03 26.04 26.05 26.06 26.07 26.08 26.09 26.10 26.11 26.12 26.13 {{cite web |url=https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/covid-19-daily-deaths/ |title=COVID 19 total announced deaths 2 October 2020 |publisher=NHS.uk |date= |accessdate=2 October 2020
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