Selasa, 17 Maret 2020

US, UK coronavirus strategies shifted following UK epidemiologists' ominous report - CNN

Sweeping restrictions take effect in coronavirus response as health officials warn US is at a tipping point
The study, which has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal, was released on Monday by London's Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team, which says it is advising the UK government on its response strategy. The study says it used modeling that has informed the approach of the British government in recent weeks; on Monday, the government abruptly called on vulnerable and elderly Britons to isolate themselves for 12 weeks, and introduced a variety of social distancing and quarantine recommendations that days earlier seemed distant prospects. Also on Monday, President Donald Trump unveiled a 15-day plan to slow new infections in the United States, including more stringent recommendations about staying home and avoiding groups of 10 people or more, among other steps.
An author of the study, Imperial College Professor Neil Ferguson, said in an email to CNN on Tuesday the study was given to the White House Coronavirus Task Force over the weekend and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday.
Boris Johnson ramps up UK's coronavirus response after criticism
"The White House task force received it late Sunday afternoon, CDC yesterday," Ferguson wrote to CNN. "To be honest, I don't know how much it influenced decision making. But I hear Dr Birx cited it. We will be having a much more detailed discussion with the task force tomorrow morning."
During a briefing on Monday, White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said, "We have been working on models, day and night, around the globe ... We've been working with groups in the United Kingdom. So we had new information coming out from a model." She did not specify which model she was referring to.
CNN has reached out to government officials in the UK and United States about the report.

Mitigation and suppression

Epidemiological studies are based on modeling from available data, and rely on assumptions that can later prove false, and generate predictions that can appear alarming as they deal with the pandemic's entire term. This is one of many models. While mitigation "focuses on slowing but not necessarily stopping epidemic spread," the study explains, suppression, "aims to reverse epidemic growth, reducing case numbers to low levels and maintaining that situation indefinitely."
Health officials warn US government does not have enough stockpiled medical equipment to deal with coronavirus
The study says "the most effective mitigation strategy" would still lead to hospitals -- even at surge capacity -- needing eight times as many intensive care unit beds as they could provide in the UK. Yet the study also notes that "optimal mitigation policies" -- such as combining the home isolation of suspected cases, home quarantine of those living with suspected cases and social distancing among the elderly and others at high risk of severe disease -- might reduce peak health care demand in the UK by two-thirds and deaths by half.
"For countries able to achieve it, this leaves suppression as the preferred policy option," the report concludes.
For the study, researchers used a simulation model that was originally developed to support pandemic flu planning and modified it to examine the impact of certain scenarios for the coronavirus pandemic. Their models show that under a mitigation strategy: "even if all patients were able to be treated, we predict there would still be in the order of 250,000 deaths in GB, and 1.1-1.2 million in the US." It was not immediately clear what length of time researchers assumed to be the full course of the pandemic.
Hospitals may face difficulties during coronavirus pandemic, experts say
The study concludes that the suppression strategy will likely lead to the disease quickly spreading again once these measures are lifted, and that such measures will be needed periodically until a vaccine is found. It says: "The major challenge of suppression is that this type of intensive intervention package -- or something equivalently effective at reducing transmission -- will need to be maintained until a vaccine becomes available (potentially 18 months or more) -- given that we predict that transmission will quickly rebound if interventions are relaxed."
Other health experts welcomed the study but reiterated how many uncertainties the coronavirus pandemic was generating. The publication of this evidence remains "important" and "useful," but "there are still huge uncertainties around any future estimates, reinforcing just how difficult decision-making is during a pandemic," Michael Head, a senior research fellow in global health at the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom, said in a written statement released by the UK-based Science Media Centre on Tuesday.
"It would still be useful to know the full set of evidence that is informing decision-making, both in the UK and across other countries. I'd really like to see a dashboard, a little like the visualisations of case numbers and deaths per country, that stores the reasoning behind each country's government policy," Head wrote. "This should cover not just the UK, but as many countries as possible. An open access evidence base is not as headline-grabbing as discussing mortality rates, but no less important."

WHO: Countries need 'blended strategy' for epidemics

The World Health Organization, which was not involved in the new study, notes that while there is still much to learn about the novel coronavirus, older adults and people with pre-existing medical conditions are at higher risk of developing serious illness.
According to WHO, "data to date suggest that 80% of infections are mild or asymptomatic, 15% are severe infection, requiring oxygen and 5% are critical infections, requiring ventilation."
Last week, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a media briefing that countries should tailor their responses to address the spread of disease seen specifically in their nations.
"This is an uneven epidemic at the global level. Different countries are in different scenarios, requiring a tailored response. It's not about containment or mitigation -- which is a false dichotomy. It's about both," Ghebreyesus said during the briefing.
"All countries must take a comprehensive blended strategy for controlling their epidemics and pushing this deadly virus back," he said in part. "Countries that continue finding and testing cases and tracing their contacts not only protect their own people, they can also affect what happens in other countries and globally."

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2020-03-17 16:37:00Z
52780669742245

US, UK coronavirus strategies shifted following UK epidemiologists' ominous report - CNN

Sweeping restrictions take effect in coronavirus response as health officials warn US is at a tipping point
The study, which has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal, was released on Monday by London's Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team, which says it is advising the UK government on its response strategy. The study says it used modeling that has informed the approach of the British government in recent weeks; on Monday, the government abruptly called on vulnerable and elderly Britons to isolate themselves for 12 weeks, and introduced a variety of social distancing and quarantine recommendations that days earlier seemed distant prospects. Also on Monday, President Donald Trump unveiled a 15-day plan to slow new infections in the United States, including more stringent recommendations about staying home and avoiding groups of 10 people or more, among other steps.
An author of the study, Imperial College Professor Neil Ferguson, said in an email to CNN on Tuesday the study was given to the White House Coronavirus Task Force over the weekend and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday.
Boris Johnson ramps up UK's coronavirus response after criticism
"The White House task force received it late Sunday afternoon, CDC yesterday," Ferguson wrote to CNN. "To be honest, I don't know how much it influenced decision making. But I hear Dr Birx cited it. We will be having a much more detailed discussion with the task force tomorrow morning."
During a briefing on Monday, White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said, "We have been working on models, day and night, around the globe ... We've been working with groups in the United Kingdom. So we had new information coming out from a model." She did not specify which model she was referring to.
CNN has reached out to government officials in the UK and United States about the report.

Mitigation and suppression

Epidemiological studies are based on modeling from available data, and rely on assumptions that can later prove false, and generate predictions that can appear alarming as they deal with the pandemic's entire term. This is one of many models. While mitigation "focuses on slowing but not necessarily stopping epidemic spread," the study explains, suppression, "aims to reverse epidemic growth, reducing case numbers to low levels and maintaining that situation indefinitely."
Health officials warn US government does not have enough stockpiled medical equipment to deal with coronavirus
The study says "the most effective mitigation strategy" would still lead to hospitals -- even at surge capacity -- needing eight times as many intensive care unit beds as they could provide in the UK. Yet the study also notes that "optimal mitigation policies" -- such as combining the home isolation of suspected cases, home quarantine of those living with suspected cases and social distancing among the elderly and others at high risk of severe disease -- might reduce peak health care demand in the UK by two-thirds and deaths by half.
"For countries able to achieve it, this leaves suppression as the preferred policy option," the report concludes.
For the study, researchers used a simulation model that was originally developed to support pandemic flu planning and modified it to examine the impact of certain scenarios for the coronavirus pandemic. Their models show that under a mitigation strategy: "even if all patients were able to be treated, we predict there would still be in the order of 250,000 deaths in GB, and 1.1-1.2 million in the US." It was not immediately clear what length of time researchers assumed to be the full course of the pandemic.
Hospitals may face difficulties during coronavirus pandemic, experts say
The study concludes that the suppression strategy will likely lead to the disease quickly spreading again once these measures are lifted, and that such measures will be needed periodically until a vaccine is found. It says: "The major challenge of suppression is that this type of intensive intervention package -- or something equivalently effective at reducing transmission -- will need to be maintained until a vaccine becomes available (potentially 18 months or more) -- given that we predict that transmission will quickly rebound if interventions are relaxed."
Other health experts welcomed the study but reiterated how many uncertainties the coronavirus pandemic was generating. The publication of this evidence remains "important" and "useful," but "there are still huge uncertainties around any future estimates, reinforcing just how difficult decision-making is during a pandemic," Michael Head, a senior research fellow in global health at the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom, said in a written statement released by the UK-based Science Media Centre on Tuesday.
"It would still be useful to know the full set of evidence that is informing decision-making, both in the UK and across other countries. I'd really like to see a dashboard, a little like the visualisations of case numbers and deaths per country, that stores the reasoning behind each country's government policy," Head wrote. "This should cover not just the UK, but as many countries as possible. An open access evidence base is not as headline-grabbing as discussing mortality rates, but no less important."

WHO: Countries need 'blended strategy' for epidemics

The World Health Organization, which was not involved in the new study, notes that while there is still much to learn about the novel coronavirus, older adults and people with pre-existing medical conditions are at higher risk of developing serious illness.
According to WHO, "data to date suggest that 80% of infections are mild or asymptomatic, 15% are severe infection, requiring oxygen and 5% are critical infections, requiring ventilation."
Last week, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a media briefing that countries should tailor their responses to address the spread of disease seen specifically in their nations.
"This is an uneven epidemic at the global level. Different countries are in different scenarios, requiring a tailored response. It's not about containment or mitigation -- which is a false dichotomy. It's about both," Ghebreyesus said during the briefing.
"All countries must take a comprehensive blended strategy for controlling their epidemics and pushing this deadly virus back," he said in part. "Countries that continue finding and testing cases and tracing their contacts not only protect their own people, they can also affect what happens in other countries and globally."

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2020-03-17 15:42:55Z
52780669742245

US, UK coronavirus strategies shifted following UK epidemiologists' ominous report - CNN

The study, which has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal, was released on Monday by London's Imperial College COVID-19 Response Team, which says it is advising the UK government on its response strategy. The study says it used modeling that has informed the approach of the British government in recent weeks; on Monday, the government abruptly called on vulnerable and elderly Britons to isolate themselves for 12 weeks, and introduced a variety of social distancing and quarantine recommendations that days earlier seemed distant prospects. Also on Monday, President Donald Trump unveiled a 15-day plan to slow new infections in the United States, including more stringent recommendations about staying home and avoiding groups of 10 people or more, among other steps.
An author of the study, Imperial College Professor Neil Ferguson, said in an email to CNN on Tuesday the study was given to the White House Coronavirus Task Force over the weekend and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday.
"The White House task force received it late Sunday afternoon, CDC yesterday," Ferguson wrote to CNN. "To be honest, I don't know how much it influenced decision making. But I hear Dr Birx cited it. We will be having a much more detailed discussion with the task force tomorrow morning."
During a briefing on Monday, White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said, "We have been working on models, day and night, around the globe ... We've been working with groups in the United Kingdom. So we had new information coming out from a model." She did not specify which model she was referring to.
CNN has reached out to government officials in the UK and United States about the report.
Epidemiological studies are based on modeling from available data, and rely on assumptions that can later prove false, and generate predictions that can appear alarming as they deal with the pandemic's entire term. This is one of many models. While mitigation "focuses on slowing but not necessarily stopping epidemic spread," the study explains, suppression, "aims to reverse epidemic growth, reducing case numbers to low levels and maintaining that situation indefinitely."
The study says "the most effective mitigation strategy" would still lead to hospitals -- even at surge capacity -- needing eight times as many intensive care unit beds as they could provide in the UK. Yet the study also notes that "optimal mitigation policies" -- such as combining the home isolation of suspected cases, home quarantine of those living with suspected cases and social distancing among the elderly and others at high risk of severe disease -- might reduce peak health care demand in the UK by two-thirds and deaths by half.
"For countries able to achieve it, this leaves suppression as the preferred policy option," the report concludes.
For the study, researchers used a simulation model that was originally developed to support pandemic flu planning and modified it to examine the impact of certain scenarios for the coronavirus pandemic. Their models show that under a mitigation strategy: "even if all patients were able to be treated, we predict there would still be in the order of 250,000 deaths in GB, and 1.1-1.2 million in the US." It was not immediately clear what length of time researchers assumed to be the full course of the pandemic.
The study concludes that the suppression strategy will likely lead to the disease quickly spreading again once these measures are lifted, and that such measures will be needed periodically until a vaccine is found. It says: "The major challenge of suppression is that this type of intensive intervention package -- or something equivalently effective at reducing transmission -- will need to be maintained until a vaccine becomes available (potentially 18 months or more) -- given that we predict that transmission will quickly rebound if interventions are relaxed."

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2020-03-17 15:09:58Z
CAIiEEZhnHGPZ8GgDLA5hXECK0YqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowocv1CjCSptoCMPrTpgU

Senin, 16 Maret 2020

'Where is Boris?': The UK government's cautious coronavirus strategy provokes a public backlash - CNBC

Boris Johnson, U.K. prime minister and leader of the Conservative Party, reacts during a general election campaign visit to the JCB Cab Manufacturing Centre in Uttoxeter, U.K., on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2019.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The U.K. government is facing growing calls from the public and scientific community to take more drastic measures to combat the new coronavirus, as the rest of Europe and the U.S. shuts down much of public life to prevent the virus spreading further.

"#WhereisBoris" has been trending on Twitter this weekend with many members of the British public venting their frustration at Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his government's apparently cautious approach when it comes to containing, and now delaying, the spread of the virus.

As of Sunday, the U.K. has a total of 1,395 positive cases of coronavirus and 35 people have died, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University.

On Twitter, a growing number of people are questioning the official numbers, and the government's strategy to keep schools open as long as possible as well as museums, shops, bars and restaurants. In fact, many members of the British public are now pleading with the government to shut down public life, as other countries from the U.S. to Europe, are doing.

Some members of the public are also advocating a walkout of schools and workplaces with #covid19walkout also trending on Twitter.

On Sunday night, the U.K. government said it would start giving a daily press conference on the outbreak, and how the public can protect itself, and said it would meet with industries and communicate with international leaders to "drive forward efforts to curb the virus."

On Monday afternoon, Johnson will also chair a meeting of the U.K.'s emergency committee to coordinate the government's ongoing response to coronavirus. "The meeting is expected to include discussion on current modelling of the outbreak and next steps on plans around shielding elderly and vulnerable people, household isolation and mass gatherings," Downing Street said in a statement.

London's FTSE 100 index plunged Monday, trading 6.7% lower. It has fallen 34% since the start of the year.

Slow to respond?

The U.K. government had initially said it would not be carrying out mass testing on the population and advised the public that the best thing it could do was to wash hands properly, and said anyone with a fever or persistent cough should self-isolate for seven days. 

Having accepted last week that the outbreak moved from the "contain" phase to the "delay" stage, however, the government has not announced any immediate restrictions on public life.

The government noted that "in the coming weeks, we will be introducing further social distancing measures for older and vulnerable people, asking them to self-isolate regardless of symptoms" but said that "if we introduce this next stage too early, the measures will not protect us at the time of greatest risk but could have a huge social impact."

"We need to time this properly, continue to do the right thing at the right time, so we get the maximum effect for delaying the virus. We will clearly announce when we ask the public to move to this next stage. Our decisions are based on careful modelling. We will only introduce measures that are supported by clinical and scientific evidence," it said in a statement.

There was consternation, however, at comments made by the U.K. government's chief scientific advisor Patrick Vallance seeming to suggest that part of the government's strategy was to "broaden the peak" of it to avoid overwhelming demand and pressure on the National Health Service (NHS), and to allow a large part of the population to build up some immunity to the virus, a strategy known as "herd immunity."

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson visits a laboratory at the Public Health England National Infection Service in Colindale on March 1, 2020 in London, England.

WPA Pool

The government backtracked from the comments this weekend after a group of over 200 scientists openly questioned the wisdom of that approach, telling the government in an open letter that they were concerned at plans to delay social-distancing measures. 

"Under unconstrained growth, this outbreak will affect millions of people in the next few weeks. This will most probably put the NHS at serious risk of not being able to cope with the flow of patients needing intensive care ... Going for 'herd immunity' at this point does not seem a viable option, as this will put NHS at an even stronger level of stress, risking many more lives than necessary." The scientists said that by putting in place social distancing measures now, "the growth can be slowed down dramatically, and thousands of lives can be spared."

"We consider the social distancing measures taken as of today as insufficient, and we believe that additional and more restrictive measures should be taken immediately, as it is already happening in other countries across the world."

Europe's shutdown

As the number of confirmed cases and death toll mounts in the region, many European countries have brought in restrictions on the public, closing schools and universities, museums, bars and restaurants and banning mass gatherings and even closing borders. 

In the worst hit countries of Italy and Spain, only grocery stores and pharmacies remain open as the southern European countries tackle their worst public health emergency in recent years. 

While Spain has imposed a 15-day nationwide lockdown, banning its 46 million citizens from all-non essential movement, the euro zone's largest economies France and Germany have closed large parts of their economies and fortified borders. In the U.S. too, New York City and Los Angeles have shut down bars, restaurants and other public places and Las Vegas has closed its casinos.

Despite (or perhaps due to) the lack of restrictions in the U.K., the public is fearful of an imminent lockdown and shortages, with widespread panic-buying seen at supermarkets with staples like toilet paper, pasta, soap and diapers stripped from the shelves. U.K. supermarkets pleaded with shoppers Sunday not to stockpile goods and to only take what they need.

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2020-03-16 09:11:53Z
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Minggu, 15 Maret 2020

Dueling U.S., U.K. travel restrictions and advisories strain transatlantic relations - NBC News

LONDON — Amid a worsening coronavirus epidemic, the U.S. and the U.K. engaged in a political tit for tat Sunday after Britain advised its citizens against all but essential travel to the U.S. hours after the White House announced it would expand a European travel ban to include the United Kingdom and Ireland.

With 1,140 people testing positive for the virus, 21 dead and up to 10,000 suspected cases, the British government has called for a national effort to fight the spread of the epidemic similar to the one which helped the country through the Second World War.

"Our generation has never been tested like this," health minister Matt Hancock wrote in right-leaning newspaper The Sunday Telegraph, calling the coronavirus "the biggest public health emergency in a generation."

But travel restrictions imposed by the U.S. are adding more strain to the so-called "special relationship" between the United States and Britain.

Follow live updates of the coronavirus crisis

The U.K. and Ireland were initially left off the list when President Donald Trump banned nationals from 26 countries in Europe, where the growing pandemic has shifted, from coming to the U.S. earlier this week. But on Saturday night, Vice President Mike Pence confirmed that the ban will be extended to include the two nations as of Tuesday morning.

The initial exclusion of the U.K. was praised by Brexit supporters as evidence that the bilateral relationship between the two nations was thriving.

“The UK is now being treated as an independent country,” tweeted one of Trump’s most famous supporters in the U.K., Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage.

The transatlantic alliance, nurtured by presidents and prime ministers for decades, has endured some of its toughest tests since President Donald Trump took office in 2016.

With economic uncertainty hanging over Britain after its departure from the European Union, a process known as Brexit, Prime Minister Boris Johnson needs the U.K.'s old ally more than ever to forge a new free trade deal.

But the news of the U.K. inclusion on the travel ban seems to have caught British authorities off guard.

“This is a decision for the U.S.,” U.K.’s foreign office said in a statement Sunday. It was followed by a directive from the U.K.'s Foreign Office advising against all but essential travel to the whole of America “due to restrictions put in place by the U.S. government.”

Downing Street said Trump and Johnson spoke on the phone Saturday night to discuss the pandemic, “agreeing on the importance of international coordination,” without weighing in on the travel ban or whether the U.K .was given any advance warning about now being included in it.

Earlier this week, Britain stepped up its response to the outbreak, moving to the so-called "delay" phase, with Johnson calling coronavirus “the worst public health crisis for a generation” and warning families they would "lose loved ones before their time.”

But some have criticized his government for not implementing more of the measures taken in other European countries, such as increasing social isolation, shutting schools and banning mass gatherings.

On Sunday, the British government looked poised to escalate its efforts, saying it will introduce powers to force people into quarantine if necessary and would in the days ahead advise all people aged over 70 to self-isolate.

‘Panic and confusion’

The ban on travel from the U.K. and Ireland left many Americans left scrambling to get home.

Despite assurances from Vice President Pence that U.S. citizens in either country could still get home, many were caught off guard.

Americans Chyna Barrett and Ethan Smith spent two days in limbo and an extra $1,000 to get home to San Francisco, California after they heard about the European ban while on vacation in Portugal. They heard about the U.K. being added to the ban when they got to London.

March 14, 202001:47

“It’s a massive relief,” Barrett, 22, told NBC News at Heathrow Airport Saturday after they secured their flights home.

“I am not sure if I agree with the bans or not, but I feel as though the sudden announcements caused a lot of panic and confusion in a lot of travelers. It’s a global pandemic and not limited to any one place,” the operations coordinator added.

But not everyone is eager to leave.

Sarah Philpott, who is on a study abroad program in London from Hollins University in Virginia, said she is staying put in the U.K., awaiting further instructions from her school.

She called the extension of the European travel ban to the U.K. “unnecessary.”

“I think every country is doing their best,” Philpott, 21, said. “I know most people are not going to travel needlessly, and I think it’s causing a lot of havoc to ban all of Europe when it’s not like all of Europe has many cases.”

Alex Holmes and Nikolai Miller contributed.

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2020-03-15 15:45:10Z
52780663777601

Coronavirus: UK deaths double in 24 hours - BBC News

Ten more people in the UK have died in the last 24 hours after testing positive for coronavirus, bringing the total number of deaths to 21.

The UK government's chief medical adviser said the patients were all in "at-risk" groups from across England.

The total number of confirmed cases in the UK has reached 1,140 while 37,746 people have been tested.

It comes as the government revealed plans to boost the number of NHS beds and ventilators to treat people.

British manufacturing companies are to be tasked with increasing the production of ventilators and other medical equipment, while the NHS could also buy up thousands of beds in private hospitals.

In a conference call with manufacturers on Monday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson will urge them to join a "national effort" to tackle the virus.

Downing Street says it has already been working with suppliers in the UK and abroad to increase the nation's supply of ventilators.

Earlier, the Labour Party and GMB union called for the government to use empty beds in "plush private hospitals" to ease the pressure on the NHS.

It comes as Prof Chris Whitty, the UK government's chief medical adviser, warned that facilities for people needing oxygen and critical care beds would be the parts of the NHS that will come under pressure first as the scale of the outbreak increases.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump decided to suspend all travel between the US and the UK and Ireland.

A No 10 spokesman said Mr Johnson had since spoken to Mr Trump, and set out the "science-led approach" the UK is taking.

During their conversation, the two leaders also agreed on the "importance" of international collaboration to fast-track the development of a vaccine.

It comes as France ordered non-essential locations used by the public to close, and asked citizens to go out as little as possible. Several European countries have closed their borders or shut their airports.

US vice president Mike Pence said the ban would begin at midnight on Monday eastern standard time (04:00 GMT), following a "unanimous recommendation" from health experts.

The US has already banned travel from 26 European countries.

Of the latest deaths in the UK, eight were men aged over 80 and all were in "at-risk" groups.

They were being treated in hospitals in Buckinghamshire, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Leicester, London and Chester.

Prof Whitty said: "I understand this increase in the number of deaths linked to Covid-19 will be a cause for concern for many. The public should know every measure we are taking is seeking to save lives and protect the most vulnerable."

Most of the confirmed UK cases are in England. There have been 121 confirmed cases in Scotland, 60 in Wales and 34 in Northern Ireland.

What do I do if I...

Have symptoms: If you are experiencing a new, continuous cough and/or a fever - defined as a temperature of above 37.8C - you should self-isolate at home for at least seven days, according to guidance released on Friday by Public Health England (PHE).

People with mild symptoms who are self-isolating at home are not currently being tested. All hospital patients with flu-like symptoms are being tested.

Live with or been in close contact with a positive case: The seven day isolation period now applies to everyone regardless of where you might have travelled or if you have had close contact with a confirmed case.

Read more here.

People who are self-isolating with mild symptoms are no longer being tested for the virus. The government said on Friday it estimated the true number of UK cases to be around 5,000 to 10,000.

The PM has been meeting with officials at Downing Street to discuss the pandemic.

A mother and her newborn baby are among the latest confirmed to have the virus in England.

Medics are trying to confirm whether the baby, who was tested at North Middlesex Hospital, was infected during birth or before, according to the Sun newspaper.

The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said there was no evidence the virus can be passed on from pregnant women to babies before birth, but that due to how little is known about the new virus it would continue to update its guidance.

Government advice adds there is "no clinical evidence" to suggest the virus can be transmitted through breast milk.

"Infection can be spread to the baby in the same way as to anyone in close contact with you," it says.

The increase in deaths is obviously alarming for the public - as well as being a tragedy for the families involved.

What we don't know is the extent to which coronavirus played a role in their deaths.

We only know they had it when they died.

Every patient death announced in the coronavirus outbreak in the UK has been a person who has had underlying health conditions.

That is a term that covers a range of different illnesses from heart disease and diabetes to asthma.

There is certainly transmission of the virus within hospital - on Thursday three quarters of those patients with coronavirus in intensive care had not been abroad to an affected country.

They may have caught it in the community and the Covid-19 illness they developed lead to their admission or they could have caught it in hospital when they were already ill.

There are more than 1,500 deaths a day in the UK on average and what is certain is that growing numbers of people who die are going to have tested positive for coronavirus.

People visiting elderly and vulnerable relatives have been reminded to take extra care, after the government released new advice.

Care home providers should ask anyone who is "generally unwell" not to visit, the advice says.

Meanwhile, government sources said mass gatherings might soon be banned in the UK to ease pressure on emergency services. It is thought a ban could take effect as early as next weekend.

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Events still set to go ahead include the Grand National in April, the 75th anniversary VE Day commemorations and Chelsea Flower Show in May, and Glastonbury Festival in June.

The increase in cases in the UK comes as people continue to stockpile food and household items. The government has said there was "no need" for people to do so but has also relaxed restrictions on delivery hours for shops to make sure they remain stocked.

Online supermarket Ocado has taken its app offline due to "performance issues driven by continued high demand" while the website has crashed for many users.

Former MP Luciana Berger called for members of the public to "look out for" each other after she said she witnessed a man in a London supermarket refusing to give an elderly lady one of his packets of pasta.

She said the incident, which she posted about on Twitter, was "very upsetting".

Meanwhile British holidaymakers face being stranded abroad as Spain is set to begin a two-week state of emergency, with bars, restaurants, shops and activities all closed.

Seven Jet2 planes heading to Spain were turned around in mid-air as the airline cancelled all flights to the mainland, Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands. The firm says it has suspended all holidays and flights to all of Spain for at least a week.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has advised against all but essential travel to parts of Spain as well as the whole of Poland.

The Polish government is closing all its borders for 10 days at midnight. Some non-Polish nationals - such as spouses or children of Polish nationals - will still be allowed to enter the country,

All flights to and from Poland by airlines in the Ryanair group have been cancelled from midnight on Saturday to midnight on 31 March.

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In other developments:

  • Benefit claimants who can't attend reassessments or job centre appointments because they are self-isolating or are infected by coronavirus will not be sanctioned provided they make this clear in good time, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) says
  • British couple David and Sally Abel, who both tested positive for the virus on board the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship, have returned to the UK, after recovering in a Japanese hospital
  • Brittany Ferries is stopping its services from Portsmouth to Le Havre, in France, and to Spain. Its sailings from Poole will be for freight only and will not take any passengers
  • All Apple stores outside of what the tech giant calls "Greater China" - that is China, Macau, Hong Kong and Taiwan - have been closed for two weeks. The tech giant reopened all 42 of its Chinese stores on Friday after they were closed for a month, causing a huge drop in iPhone sales
  • Catholic churches are preparing for the possibility they might have to suspend the celebration of Mass
  • Most of the world's major sporting events have been postponed or cancelled because of the pandemic, including the Edinburgh Marathon and the London Landmarks Half Marathon.
  • Bath's annual half marathon is going ahead on Sunday despite local MP Wera Hobhouse saying it should be cancelled. Organisers said it is "now too late to cancel or postpone the event"
  • The National Education Union has written to the prime minister to ask why the government has decided not to shut schools to help reduce the spread of the virus and asking for "fuller disclosure" of the models it has used during its decision-making process

Have you been affected by the coronavirus? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiJGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy91ay01MTg4OTk1N9IBKGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy9hbXAvdWstNTE4ODk5NTc?oc=5

2020-03-15 14:59:59Z
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Singapore Says U.K. Is Not Trying to Contain the Coronavirus - Bloomberg

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Singapore Says U.K. Is Not Trying to Contain the Coronavirus  Bloomberg
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJsb29tYmVyZy5jb20vbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlcy8yMDIwLTAzLTE1L3Utay1ub3QtdHJ5aW5nLXRvLWNvbnRhaW4tY29yb25hdmlydXMtc2luZ2Fwb3JlLW1pbmlzdGVyLXNheXPSAXRodHRwczovL3d3dy5ibG9vbWJlcmcuY29tL2FtcC9uZXdzL2FydGljbGVzLzIwMjAtMDMtMTUvdS1rLW5vdC10cnlpbmctdG8tY29udGFpbi1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1zaW5nYXBvcmUtbWluaXN0ZXItc2F5cw?oc=5

2020-03-15 14:29:50Z
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