Kamis, 02 April 2020

Grim one-day virus death toll for US, Spain, UK: Live updates - Al Jazeera English

Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States have all reported the highest number of deaths in a single day since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

The US recorded 884 coronavirus deaths, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University. It has also confirmed more than 213,000 cases of the disease.

More:

In the UK, a further 563 people died from COVID-19, in what Prime Minister Boris Johnson described as a "sad, sad day".

In Spain, an additional 864 people died. 

Globally, about 938,000 have been diagnosed with the virus, and some 194,000 have recovered. Nearly 47,000 people have died from the disease, which originated in China late last year.

Here are the latest updates:

Thursday, April 2

07:45 GMT - Russia cases jump to more than 3,500 in record daily rise

Russia's coronavirus case tally jumped has jumped to 3,548 , a record daily increase of 771, according to Russia's crisis response centre.

Cases have been recorded in 76 of Russia's more than 80 regions, but Moscow remains the epicentre of the outbreak with 595 cases, the centre said. Thirty people have died across the country, it said

07:30 GMT - Top UK health officials says 'everybody is frustrated' over stalled testing

One of the UK's top health officials has said there is widespread frustration within the government that the country was not testing enough people yet.

"Everybody involved is frustrated that we haven't got to the position yet that we need to get to," Paul Cosford, emeritus medical director of Public Health England, told BBC radio.

"We've got not as far as we've wanted to but we've got up to almost 13,000 tests a day being available," he said.

07:20 GMT - Almost 900,000 Spanish workers lost their job since lockdown

Some 898,822 workers lost their jobs since March 12 in Spain, social security data showed on Thursday, more than half of which are temporary workers.

The number of people officially registered as unemployed in the country rose to 3.5 million in March, the highest level since April 2017.

07:15 GMT - Cyprus extends flight ban for another two weeks

Cyprus has extended a ban on commercial air links with 28 countries for another two weeks  to curb the spread of coronavirus.

The ban, introduced on March 21 for a 14-day period, will remain for a further 14 days, Cypriot Minister of Transport Yiannis Karousos said in a tweet. He said the decision was dictated by the situation in Cyprus, and the "dramatic" situation in other European states.

Cyprus has recorded 320 coronavirus cases and nine deaths. It has imposed tough restrictions on movement, including a night curfew and allowing people to leave their homes only once a day with a special permit. 

07:05 GMT - China accuses US officials of making 'shameless' comments on data

China's foreign ministry has said that US officials are making "shameless" comments casting doubt about China's reporting of coronavirus cases in the country.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said during a daily briefing that China has been open and transparent about the coronavirus outbreak that began in the country late last year, and accused the US of politicising a health issue and that the country should instead focus on the safety of its people.

The statement comes after the US intelligence community, in a classified report to the White House, concluded that China's reporting has been intentionally incomplete, according to media reports. 

China Wuhan

People wearing face masks walk on a bridge in Wuhan, Hubei province, the epicenter of China's coronavirus outbreak [Aly Song/Reuters]

07:00 GMT - British Airways in union talks to suspend about 32,000 staff: Report

British Airways is in talks with its union about a plan to suspend about 32,000 staff in response to the coronavirus pandemic, a person familiar with the situation told Reuters news agency.

The British flag carrier has cut flights and warned it will need to cut jobs to survive the outbreak as the battered aviation sector frantically seeks to lower costs.

06:45 GMT - Greece quarantines migrant camp after positive test

Greece has quarantined a migrant camp after 20 asylum seekers tested positive for coronavirus, the migration ministry has said.

Any movement in and out of the Ritsona camp, which is 75 kilometres (45 miles) northeast of Athens and hosts up to 2,500 people, will be restricted for 14 days the ministry said, adding that police would monitor the implementation of the measures.

Tests on 63 people were conducted after a 19-year-old female migrant who gave birth in hospital in Athens was found infected, becoming the first recorded case among thousands of asylum seekers kept in overcrowded migrant camps across the country. None of the confirmed cases had any symptoms, the ministry said.

A view of a refugee camp in Ritsona, northern of Athens, Greece, REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis

A view of a refugee camp in Ritsona, northern of Athens, Greece [File:Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters]

06:40 GMT - Thailand reports 104 new cases, three new deaths

Thailand has reported 104 new coronavirus cases, bringing its total to 1,875 cases, a spokesman for the government's Center for COVID-19 Situation Administration has said.

There were three new deaths in the country, bringing the total fatalities to 15 deaths, spokesman Taweesin Wisanuyothin said.

06:30 GMT - China says new deaths steady at six

China reported six new coronavirus deaths as of the end of Wednesday, the same number as the previous day. 

China had 35 new coronavirus cases on April 1, all of which were imported, the National Health Commission has said. 

06:15 GMT - New holiday for Indonesia to replace traditional Eid exodus?

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has said the government is considering starting a new national holiday to prevent the annual mass exodus that usually takes place at the end of the Muslim fasting month.

Widodo said at a cabinet meeting that measures could be put in place during the new holiday to help "bring some calm to the people".

Minister Juliari Batubara also told reporters that the government plans to give special assistance to residents of Jakarta this year to limit the exodus from the capital during the holiday period, which falls over April and May. 

Nearly 90 percent of Indonesians are Muslim and usually return to their home villages at the end of Ramadan, buying new clothes and enjoying a feast with their families and friends.

COVID-19: Hate crimes against Asians on the rise in US

06:00 GMT - Australia begins pre-clinical testing for vaccine

Australia's national science agency has it has commenced the first stage of testing potential vaccines for COVID-19, as it joins a global race to halt the coronavirus pandemic.

Pre-clinical testing by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), comprising injecting ferrets with two potential vaccines, was underway at its high-containment biosecurity facility near Melbourne.

The first phase testing would take around three months, CSIRO's director of health Rob Grenfell told Reuters news agency, adding that any resulting vaccine would not be available to the public before late next year. Human trials of one of the two vaccine candidates being tested was expected to begin later this month or early next month.

Australia has reported around 5,200 cases and 24 deaths.

More:

05:45 GMT - WHO expects Malaysia cases to peak in middle of April

The number of coronavirus cases in Malaysia is expected to peak in mid-April, the World Health Organisation said on Thursday, adding that there are signs of a flattening of the infection curve.

"Based on available data, the WHO Country Office has projected that Malaysia will see a peak in hospitalized cases in mid-April," Ying-Ru Lo, the WHO's head of mission and representative to Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore told Reuters news agency in emailed comments.

The number of critically ill patients is estimated to reach the peak within the next week, she said. There have been 2,908 confirmed cases in the country and 45 deaths. 

Hello, this is Joseph Stepansky in Doha taking over from my colleague Kate Mayberry

05:30 GMT - Summary of this morning's developments

I'm handing over the blog to my colleagues in Doha shortly.

A brief summary of developments this morning:

  • It seems the US will allowed the passengers on board the Zaandam cruise ship, where there are number of coronavirus cases, to disembark in Florida.
  • The US is also planning to evacuate sailors from its USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier, which has also reported cases of the virus. It's currently in Guam.
  • Australia is optimistic that its 'stay at home' measures are helping slow the rate of infection.
  • Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has become a target of mockery for his plan to send two masks to each household in the country.  

05:25 GMT - Health workers in the Philippines battling not only virus but stigma

The Philippines is the location of the second worst outbreak of coronavirus in Southeast Asia, but the doctors and nurses on the front lines are battling not only a virus, but a stigma of infection.

As Al Jazeera's Ana Santos reports from Manila, they have been turfed out of their homes, told not to board buses and refused service at stalls and restaurants. 

05:05 GMT - Philippines Ambassador to Lebanon dies from COVID-19

Bernardita Catalla, the Philippine ambassador to Lebanon, has died from COVID-19 at a hospital in Beirut.

05:00 GMT - China sending flight to UK to bring students home

A chartered flight is currently on its way to London to collect a group of Chinese students who have beeb unable to return home, after organising similar repatriation flights from countries including Italy and Iran.

The Chinese government says it has given out “health packages” with more than 11 million masks and 500,000 disinfecting products to Chinese students in hard-hit countries.

04:55 GMT - South Korea says 158 short-term visitors in isolation

South Korea says 158 short-term visitors have been isolated in designated facilities a day after it began enforcing two-week quarantines on everyone arriving from overseas.

Vice Health Minister Kim Gang-lip on Thursday also said 224 South Korean nationals and 11 foreigners remained at the airport awaiting the results of virus tests after showing symptoms when they arrived in the country on Wednesday.

Eight foreigners were denied entry after they refused to accept the quarantine.

04:30 GMT - Germany cases rise to more than 73,500

Germany's Robert Koch Institute says the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country has risen to 73,522 while 872 people have died of the disease.

Cases rose by 6,156 compared with the previous day while the death toll climbed by 140.

04:15 GMT - Jazz great Ellis Marsalis dies from pneumonia at age of 85

Ellis Marsalis Jr, jazz pianist, teacher and patriarch of a New Orleans musical clan that includes famed performer sons Wynton and Branford, has died after battling pneumonia brought on by the coronavirus, one of his sons said late on Wednesday. 

"Pneumonia was the actual thing that caused his demise," Ellis Marsalis III told Associated Press. "But it was pneumonia brought on by COVID-19."

The 85-year old jazz patriarch lived in New Orleans. Four of his six sons are musicians.

Ellis Marsalis

Ellis Marsalis, pictured during the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival last year, died from pneumonia brought on by the coronavirus at the age of 85 [File: Sophia Germer/AP Photo] 

04:00 GMT - Japan's Abe under attack over two-mask plan

People in Japan have responded to a promise by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to send two reusable cloth face masks to every household with mockery.

The hashtag "Abenomasks", a play on the prime minister's signature "Abenomics" economic policy, was trending on Twitter.

02:35 GMT - Shenzhen announces sweeping ban on breeding and consumption of wildlife

The southern Chinese city of Shenzhen has issued the most sweeping ban yet on the breeding and consumption of wild animals.

The coronavirus has been traced to a market in Wuhan that sold wild animals such as pangolins and civet cats, as well as more conventional fare such as chicken and fish. 

The Shenzhen regulations permanently ban the trade in and consumption of wild animals, a step beyond the temporary ban issued by the central government at the start of the current outbreak. Along with snakes, lizards and other wild animals, it also bans the consumption of dog and cat meat.

Those who break the law risk fines reflecting the value of the wildlife seized, starting at 150,000 yuan ($21,400).

02:30 GMT - Australia says it is slowing the spread of the coronavirus

Some good news from Australia, where Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said the country is slowing the spread of the coronavirus, and parliament will reopen next Wednesday.

02:10 GMT - Trump says cruise ship passengers to be evacuated in Florida

US President Donald Trump says passengers on board the Zaandam cruise ship will be evacuated after it docks in Florida.

Zaandam

The Zaandam was previously anchored off Panama but the ministry of health denied entry after people on board were reported with COVID-19 symptoms. It is expected to dock in Florida where passengers will be evacuated [Carlos Lemos/EPA]

The ship, where dozens of people have fallen ill from coronavirus, has been barred from several South American countries.

The Zaandam and its sister ship, Rotterdam, are expected to enter US waters early on Thursday and dock in in Fort Lauderdale.

Trump said the US was "sending medical teams on board the ships" and taking people off, with foreigners sent home.

02:10 GMT - South Korea starts campaigning for parliamentary polls

South Korea started campaigning for the April 15 parliamentary elections on Thursday with the government's response to the coronavirus outbreak, and its impact on the economy, expected to be among voters' key concerns.

There are 253 direct seats and 47 proportional seats up for grabs, with voters able to cast two ballots - one for a candidate and one for a political party, according to Yonhap news agency.

South Korea

An official from the National Election Commission checks candidates' posters as two weeks of campaigning gets underway for parliamentary elections on April 15 [Yonhap via Reuters]

01:55 GMT - Human Rights Watch warns on Cambodia emergency powers

Human Rights Watch has Cambodia's emergency law could enable longtime prime minister Hun Sen to restrict all civil and political liberties, target the media and crack down on human rights defenders.

"These sweeping, undefined and unchecked powers should set off alarm bells among Cambodia's friends and donors," HRW's Asia Director Brad Adams said in a statement.

The group urged Cambodia to submit a new draft prioritising public health and safeguarding basic rights. The bill is due to go to the one-party National Assembly next week.

00:15 GMT - Sailors to be taken off aircraft carrier by Friday: US Navy

Nearly 3,000 sailors on board a US aircraft carrier where the coronavirus has spread will be taken off the ship by Friday, Navy officials said on Wednesday.

Acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly said some need to remain on board the USS Theodore Roosevelt to protect the ship and run critical systems.

"We cannot and will not remove all sailors from the ship," Modly told Pentagon reporters.

He said about 1,000 have gone ashore and that number will grow to at least 2,700 in a couple of days. Just under 100 of the nearly 5,000 sailors on the ship, now docked in Guam, have tested positive for the virus.

At least 100 sailors on US aircraft carrier contract COVID-19

00:00 GMT - Israel's health minister and his wife test positive for coronavirus

Israeli Health Minister Yaakov Litzman and his wife have tested positive for the novel coronavirus, his office said late on Wednesday.

The Health Ministry says the 71-year-old and his wife are feeling well, receiving medical care and will remain in isolation.

Litzman is the most senior Israeli official to be diagnosed with the virus and will continue to work from home.

----

I'm Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur with Al Jazeera's continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic.

Read all the updates from yesterday (April 1) here.  

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2020-04-02 08:16:52Z
CAIiEAoJ-XZZ0CPFRcDihMpgl2QqFAgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgw0O8B

Rabu, 01 April 2020

Coronavirus: UK deaths rise to 2,352 amid rush to test medics - BBC News

The government is facing growing pressure to ramp up coronavirus testing, as the UK saw its biggest daily increase in deaths.

Some 2,352 virus patients have died in hospital as of 17:00 on Tuesday - up 563 in a day, the latest figures show.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said testing was "massively increasing" and it was "the way through" the pandemic.

A doctor who came out of retirement to volunteer for the NHS became the fourth UK medic to die with the virus.

Dr Alfa Sa'adu had been volunteering at Queen Victoria Memorial Hospital in Welwyn when he contracted coronavirus, which causes the disease Covid-19.

His son Dani Saadu posted online that his dad had died after "fighting the virus for two weeks".

"The NHS were amazing and did everything they could," he said.

"My dad was a living legend, worked for the NHS for nearly 40 years saving people's lives here and in Africa."

In a video message posted on Twitter, the prime minister said Wednesday had been a "sad, sad day".

Mr Johnson also reiterated the government's commitment to "ramp up" testing, saying: "This is how we will unlock the coronavirus puzzle. This is how we will defeat it in the end," he said.

'Up-tick' in car journeys

Dr Yvonne Doyle, Public Health England medical director, told a daily coronavirus briefing in Downing Street that the UK was not in "as severe" a position as Spain, the US or Italy, but added there was "no reason to be complacent".

She said while the spread of the virus was most advanced in London, the Midlands region - where more than 3,500 people have tested positive for the virus - was "obviously a concern" too.

Dr Doyle added while use of public transport had gone down since the government enforced social distancing measures, an "up-tick" in motor vehicle use in the last 24 hours was "slightly concerning". She urged members of the public to stay home to "protect the NHS".

'Hundreds of thousands' of tests promised

The government has been under pressure to increase the screening of medics, so that those who are self-isolating unnecessarily can return to work.

More than 3,500 NHS frontline staff in England and Wales have been tested for the virus since the outbreak began.

But cabinet minister Michael Gove said a shortage of chemicals needed for the tests meant the NHS - which employs 1.2m in England - could not screen all workers.

The prime minister's official spokesman said the government was working with NHS England, Public Health England and other organisations to boost test capacity with an additional network of labs and testing sites.

Dr Doyle said there was currently capacity for about 3,000 tests a day for frontline NHS staff.

She said the "intention" was for testing for frontline staff to increase from "thousands to hundreds of thousands within the coming weeks".


Have things got worse?

Just yesterday health officials were talking about "green shoots" amid signs the virus maybe plateauing.

Yet today we have seen a big rise in deaths. Have things got worse?

Not necessarily. We know the number of deaths are going to go up - that is to be expected.

What matters is the trend over a few days - not what happens over the course of 24 hours.

Any signs of progress will be seen in the number of cases first.

For the past five days the new cases has been hovering between 2,500 and 3,000 each day.

Now it has gone up by 4,300. That is a substantial rise, but over the course of the past week the trajectory has still slowed from what it had been.

All eyes will be on what happens in the next few days to see if the hope of a slow down was misplaced.

Read more from Nick on how to understand the coronavirus death toll.


The BBC's head of statistics Robert Cuffe said the latest increases in the number of patients dying with coronavirus balance out with the below-average rises on Sunday and Monday.

He said the number of new deaths has been increasing at a slightly slower rate than earlier in the epidemic, "but if that keeps up, we'd expect to see in the region of a thousand deaths a day by the weekend".

Joining Dr Doyle in the Downing Street briefing, Business Secretary Alok Sharma said financial support packages introduced by the government were beginning to help ease the economic impact of the pandemic on businesses.

He said: "Just as the taxpayer stepped in to help the banks in 2008, we will help the banks to do everything they can to repay that favour and support the businesses and people of the UK in their time of need."

Mr Sharma added Chancellor Rishi Sunak would give more information "in the coming days" on how businesses will be supported further.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Downing Street said 390 million pieces of personal protective equipment (PPE) including masks, alcohol wipes and aprons, have been delivered to NHS staff over the last two weeks.

The prime minister's official spokesperson said the government was working with a number of suppliers which had come forward with offers of PPE, or proposals to manufacture more.

It follows criticism from some frontline workers over the lack of protective equipment, with staff at one hospital in Essex warning they could "limit services" to patients with coronavirus "to a bare minimum" over fears for their own safety.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The prime minister's spokesperson also said the NHS will be sent 30 new ventilators next week and promised "hundreds" more would follow.

The NHS is reported to have 8,175 ventilators and the government believes up to 30,000 ventilators could be needed at the peak of the pandemic.

In other developments:

  • Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle has written to Jacob Rees-Mogg, Leader of the House of Commons, to ensure Parliament can operate "virtually" in the event social distancing measures remain in place on 21 April, when MPs plan to return to work
  • Defence Secretary Ben Wallace became the fourth cabinet minister to have to self-isolate
  • In the past 15 days, NHS 111 has responded to more than 1.7 million inquiries from people concerned they might have symptoms of coronavirus
  • Wimbledon has been cancelled for the first time since World War Two because of the pandemic
  • All Champions League and Europa League matches have been suspended "until further notice" by Uefa
  • The Edinburgh Festival, due to take place in August, has also been cancelled
  • The Ministry of Defence said 80 armed forces personnel would be sent to staff ambulances and 999 call centres across Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Oxfordshire, Sussex and Surrey
  • Some of the UK's biggest banks have agreed to scrap dividend payments and hold onto the cash, which may be needed during the coronavirus crisis
  • New research suggests a loss of smell or taste may be a sign that you have coronavirus
  • The DWP say there have been 950,000 new Universal Credit claims from the mid-March shutdown until 31 March - the normal figure for a two-week period is 100,000
  • Pregnant prisoners could be granted temporary release from prison "within days" to protect them and their unborn children from the virus.

Do you work in the NHS? Have you been tested? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

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2020-04-01 19:25:01Z
52780700421756

Coronavirus: UK deaths rise to 2,352 amid rush to test medics - BBC News

A further 563 patients with coronavirus have died in the UK, taking the total number of deaths in hospitals to 2,352.

The Department of Health said 29,474 people have tested positive for the virus, up 4,324 since Tuesday.

Following criticism, the government said it hopes to increase daily tests for frontline workers from "thousands to hundreds of thousands" within weeks.

A doctor who came out of retirement to volunteer for the NHS became the fourth UK medic to die with the virus.

Dr Alfa Sa'adu had been volunteering at Queen Victoria Memorial Hospital in Welwyn when he contracted the virus, which causes the disease Covid-19.

His son Dani Saadu posted online that his dad had died after "fighting the virus for two weeks".

"The NHS were amazing and did everything they could," he said.

"My dad was a living legend, worked for the NHS for nearly 40 years saving people's lives here and in Africa."

'Up tick' in car journeys

Dr Yvonne Doyle, PHE medical director, told a daily coronavirus briefing in Downing Street that the UK was not in "as severe" a position as Spain, the US or Italy, but added there was "no reason to be complacent".

She said while the spread of coronavirus was most advanced in London, the Midlands region - where more than 3,500 people have tested positive for the virus - was "obviously a concern" too.

Dr Doyle added while use of public transport had gone down since the government enforced social distancing measures, there had been an "up-tick" in motor transport. She urged members of the public to stay home to "protect the NHS".

'Hundreds of thousands' of tests promised

The government has been under pressure to increase the screening of medics, so that those who are self-isolating unnecessarily can return to work.

More than 3,500 NHS frontline staff in England and Wales have been tested for the virus since the outbreak began but cabinet minister Michael Gove said a shortage of chemicals needed for the tests meant the NHS - which employs 1.2m in England - could not screen all its staff for the virus.

Dr Doyle said there was currently capacity for about 3,000 tests a day for frontline NHS staff, which will increase.

She said the "intention" was for testing for frontline staff to increase from "thousands to hundreds of thousands within the coming weeks".

No 10 said test capacity would increase with an additional network of labs and testing sites.

The PM's official spokesman said the government was "working with NHS England, Public Health England and others to ensure that happens".

The latest increase in the number of people who have died relates to the 24 hours up to 17:00 BST on Tuesday.


Have things got worse?

Just yesterday health officials were talking about "green shoots" amid signs the virus maybe plateauing.

Yet today we have seen a big rise in deaths. Have things got worse?

Not necessarily. We know the number of deaths are going to go up - that is to be expected.

What matters is the trend over a few days - not what happens over the course of 24 hours.

Any signs of progress will be seen in the number of cases first.

For the past five days the new cases has been hovering between 2,500 and 3,000 each day.

Now it has gone up by 4,300. That is a substantial rise, but over the course of the past week the trajectory has still slowed from what it had been.

All eyes will be on what happens in the next few days to see if the hope of a slow down was misplaced.

Read more from Nick on how to understand the coronavirus death toll.


Joining Dr Doyle in the Downing Street briefing, Business Secretary Alok Sharma said financial support packages introduced by the government were beginning to help ease the economic impact of the pandemic on businesses.

He said: "Just as the taxpayer stepped in to help the banks in 2008, we will help the banks to do everything they can to repay that favour and support the businesses and people of the UK in their time of need."

Mr Sharma added Chancellor Rishi Sunak would give more information "in the coming days" on how businesses will be supported further.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The BBC's head of statistics Robert Cuffe said the latest increases in the number of patients dying with coronavirus balance out with the below-average rises on Sunday and Monday.

He said the number of new deaths has been increasing at a slightly slower rate than earlier in the epidemic, "but if that keeps up, we'd expect to see in the region of a thousand deaths a day by the weekend".

Meanwhile Prince Charles has spoken of the "distressing" effect of isolation following his recovery from the virus.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Downing Street said 390 million pieces of personal protective equipment (PPE) including masks, alcohol wipes and aprons, have been delivered to NHS staff over the last two weeks.

The prime minister's official spokesperson said the government was working with a number of suppliers which had come forward with offers of PPE, or proposals to manufacture more.

It follows criticism from some frontline workers over the lack of protective equipment, with staff at one hospital in Essex warning they could "limit services" to patients with coronavirus "to a bare minimum" over fears for their own safety.

The prime minister's spokesperson also said the NHS will be sent 30 new ventilators next week and promised "hundreds" more would follow.

The NHS is reported to have 8,175 ventilators and the government believes up to 30,000 ventilators could be needed at the peak of the pandemic.

In other developments:


Do you work in the NHS? Have you been tested? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

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2020-04-01 13:37:15Z
52780700421756

Nightingale Hospital: UK converts convention hall into coronavirus ICU - CNN

As the number of Covid-19 cases in the UK began to rise, the National Health Service (NHS) realized it might be short of many thousands of ICU beds.
Coronavirus cases top 860,000 globally
It hopes the solution lies in a massive convention space in London's East End, the ExCel Center -- a venue more accustomed to showcasing the latest ventilator technology than actually using it.
The coronavirus field hospital will be called NHS Nightingale, after the pioneering nurse Florence Nightingale.
"Oh my goodness, there is no comparison," said Natalie Forrest, when asked about the hospital's scale.
Normally an executive at London's Royal Free Hospital, Forrest is the operational guru responsible for transforming the empty halls into a functioning hospital in less than a week.
When fully running, it will have 4,000 beds. Just a few dozen were ready at the time a CNN crew visited. Electricians were still running cables, plumbers installing sinks, and vast halls were still stacked with plastic-wrapped machinery.
"Obviously we don't want to use those beds," Forrest said. "If we have to use this facility, which again I really hope we don't... we will need thousands of doctors and nurses and volunteers to run this facility."
Members of the military and private contractors, seen Monday, help to prepare the ExCel centre in London to become a field hospital to be known as the NHS Nightingale Hospital.
Medical director Dr. Alan McGlennan said he was most concerned about staffing, rather than equipment.
"Critical care nurses are in very short supply," he said.
NHS Nightingale won't be a hospital in a traditional sense. There will be no front door, no waiting rooms. But the site will provide vital extra critical-care capacity for London's hospitals as pressure grows.
"We will be receiving patients from ICUs across London," Forrest said. "So not all types of patients -- just patients who are sedated and ventilated, and need to be cared for in an ICU."
Britain has more than 25,400 coronavirus cases, with nearly 1,800 deaths, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

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2020-04-01 11:43:18Z
CAIiEEq8xVHYqOipqQHeD_TqgzMqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowocv1CjCSptoCMPrTpgU

UK coronavirus: Boy, 13, dies at King's College Hospital - CNN

King's College Hospital in Camberwell, south London, said in a statement Tuesday that the teenager, who tested positive for Covid-19, had died. It said that its "thoughts and condolences" were with the boy's family.
"Sadly, a 13-year old boy who tested positive for COVID-19 has passed away, and our thoughts and condolences are with the family at this time," the statement read. "The death has been referred to the Coroner and no further comment will be made."
According to a breakdown of victims of COVID-10 published by Britain's office of National Statistics, the boy is thought to be the youngest known victim of the novel Coronavirus in the UK.
A fundraiser to cover the costs of his funeral has been set up on the crowdfunding website Go Fund Me by Madinah College, where one of his siblings works. "It is with great sadness to announce that the younger brother of one of our teachers at Madinah College has sadly passed away," the page read, adding that the boy apparently had no pre-existing health conditions and "died without any family members close by due to the highly infectious nature of Covid 19".
Coronavirus symptoms: A list and when to seek help
The news came as a director at the UK's National Health Service (NHS) said there had "been a bit of a plateau" in British coronavirus cases but that despite these "green shoots... we must not take our foot off the pedal," at the daily Downing Street news conference on Tuesday.
A sign points to a coronavirus testing pod, as an ambulance arrives at King's College Hospital in Camberwell, south London, on March 11.
Stephen Powis, National Medical Director of NHS England, added: "This is not a short haul, this is going to take time. It's important that we all stick with it."
The UK recorded a 14% daily increase in coronavirus cases on Tuesday, compared to a 13% increase on Monday. It has now had 25,474 cases and 1,793 deaths, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.
A 12-year-old girl died from Covid-19 in Belgium on Monday, a spokeswoman for the Belgian Health ministry told CNN.
A woman got to say goodbye to her mother over FaceTime before she died thanks to a nurse at this Washington hospital
The Belgian government spokesperson for the fight against coronavirus, Emmanuel Andre, said "it was obviously a very difficult moment emotionally because it concerns a child, it touches the scientific and medical community.
He added that it "is an occurrence that is very rare but that upsets us."
The coronavirus can infect anyone, but it's older adults — ages 60 and up — who are thought more likely to get seriously sick from it.
Research by CNN and Global Health 50/50 last week using the available data found that men were 50% more likely than women to die after being diagnosed with Covid-19.
Initial reports of people with severe Covid-19 disease have found that they were likely to have underlying health conditions such as hypertension, cardiovascular disease and chronic lung disease, according to Global Health 50/50.

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2020-04-01 11:12:53Z
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Selasa, 31 Maret 2020

UK coronavirus response criticized as people are filmed by drones and stopped while shopping - CNN

The coronavirus crisis has upended norms in almost every Western society, giving rise to ways of life that would have seemed unimaginably Orwellian just a month ago.
But in the United Kingdom, there is a unique growing concern around draconian tactics and overreach by police forces since Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced lockdown measures on March 23.
Police in the town of Warrington in northern England were criticized last weekend for issuing a citation to six people for a variety of apparently minor acts. One recipient was "out for a drive due to boredom," the force said on Twitter Sunday, while a group of people from the same household were stopped by officers for "going to the shops for non-essential items."
Several other forces have publicized details of their own similarly eager responses; which include the conventional, like spot road checks on drivers, and the bizarre, like staining areas of natural beauty with black dye to deter visitors.
UK coronavirus outbreak shows early signs of slowing, expert says, but restrictions may last for six months
Meanwhile, a trade body for convenience store workers said "heavy-handed" officers were telling shopkeepers they couldn't stock non-essential items like Easter eggs, lashing out at "overzealous enforcement and a misreading of the rules."
The approach has led figures from across the political spectrum to raise concerns, with some warning that British policing risks slipping into territory usually occupied by authoritarian regimes and dictatorships.
"This is what a police state is like," Jonathan Sumption, a former UK Supreme Court justice, told BBC Radio on Monday. "It is a state in which a government can issue orders or express preferences with no legal authority, and the police will enforce ministers' wishes."
Legislation speedily introduced last week allows officers to fine people gathering in groups of more than two or leaving their homes without a good reason, and the measures are less severe than in several other countries.
But those increased powers have nonetheless created an awkward dynamic in a country where police do not carry arms, and where the friendly caricature of a "bobby on the beat" still resonates.
The confusion is only heightened by the fact that Britain's lockdown is looser than those in countries such as Italy or Spain. People are permitted to leave their homes to shop for basic necessities, exercise, providing medical services, or going to work if it is absolutely vital.
Futher uncertainty has arisen because the rules are being interpreted differently -- including by the UK government. When he announced the restrictions, Johnson said that people would be permitted to leave their homes to take one form of exercise a day. That guidance is repeated on the government's website.
But the regulations themselves do not specify a number or type of exercise, saying only that people are permitted to leave "to take exercise either alone or with other members of their household."
The Transport Secretary, Grant Shapps, told BBC Radio on Tuesday that people should not drive to a rural location to to take their dog for a walk -- but that's not banned in the regulations, either.
It's led to an unclear situation in the United Kingdom where individual police forces are filling in the blanks -- and, in many cases, attracting criticism.

Police urged to maintain public trust

Widespread debate about police coronavirus tactics first emerged last week, when Derbyshire's force posted a video of drone footage showing unwitting people walking through the area's Peak District National Park.
The clip highlighted a number of vehicles at a roadside stop, before featuring a couple walking their dog, and another man going for a walk by himself.
It did not appear obvious that either party was flouting the government's guidelines on outdoor exercise. But the guidelines also warn against traveling, leading Derbyshire Police's video to label the trips "not essential," sparking a backlash online.
"We understand that people will have differing views about this post, however, we will not be apologetic for using any legal and appropriate methods to keep people safe," the force responded on Twitter.
Since then, numerous examples of strict crackdowns have been highlighted -- usually by police forces themselves, which have publicized their methods on social media, including spot checks on road users.
In North Yorkshire, police published a photo showing a group of officers stopping a car. "This driver was making an essential journey, unfortunately others are not," they wrote.
Sensing the mounting concern over officers' approach, one of the UK's most senior police officers urged colleagues on Monday to maintain "the trust and confidence of the public."
"How we police this pandemic will be remembered for many years to come," assistant commissioner Neil Basu wrote in an opinion piece in The Telegraph newspaper.
Criticism of police methods has been far from universal, and those ignoring social distancing rules by gathering in parks or holding parties have equally been the targets of public anger.
Shapps, the Transport Secretary, told Sky News on Tuesday that "the police are doing a difficult job and they are doing it well," though he added: "I am sure there are individual examples where perhaps you look at it and think that is perhaps a bit further than they should have gone."
And in defense of her London officers, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick said on radio station LBC on Monday that her workforce was "adopting a very collaborative approach with the public."
"I would also ask all citizens, where they feel it safe and appropriate, to encourage members of their family and people they know to learn about the restrictions and to comply with them," Dick added, a recommendation that does little to dispel confusion about the restrictions themselves.

Calls for clarity

Media reports on Tuesday suggested that the UK's National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) was issuing new guidelines to forces in the wake of mounting complaints, although a spokesperson for the NPCC disputed those suggestions in an email to CNN.
"We are not rewriting our guidance. It remains the same as it was. Engage, explain, encourage and finally enforce," the spokesperson said. "This is a fast changing situation and we, along with the public, are adapting as we go forward."
Police officers from North Yorkshire Police stop motorists on Monday to check that their travel is essential.
Nonetheless, some legal experts have pointed to widespread confusion and an overly harsh interpretation of the government's lockdown measures as the cause of alleged overreach.
"Some police think that their job is to enforce the government's guidance, when in fact their job is to enforce the law," Raphael Hogarth, an associate at the Institute for Government think tank, said on Twitter. "The law is that you may not leave home without a reasonable excuse. The legislation gives non-exhaustive examples of such excuses."
"Some police forces seem to be using their powers without any regard to the purpose for which these powers were conferred," he added. "The purpose of the legislation is to stop the virus spreading, by stopping unnecessary inter-household contact."
How can Boris Johnson run the UK while suffering from coronavirus?
Indeed, confusion about what is and is not enforceable in the government's hastily-prepared lockdown legislation has been apparent even among lawmakers.
Labour MP Stephen Kinnock fell foul of his local police force after posting a picture showing him celebrating the birthday of his father -- the now-retired former leader of the opposition Labour Party, Neil Kinnock.
"We know celebrating your Dad's birthday is a lovely thing to do, however this is not essential travel," South Wales police told him over Twitter. Although Kinnock was sitting a sizable distance from his parents, the government's restrictions specify that people should not visit relatives unless it is essential.
"We need to be really careful here," Liberal Democrat lawmaker Layla Moran said on Twitter, responding to complaints that convenience stores were being told they could not stock "non-essential" Easter eggs.
"Making a trip only for an Easter egg is clearly against the rules. But picking one up with the bigger shop for the kids? The Government needs to give sharper guidance for (local authorities) and Police on the application of the new laws," she added.

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2020-03-31 17:25:16Z
52780696749194

UK coronavirus response criticized as people are filmed by drones and stopped while shopping - CNN

The coronavirus crisis has upended norms in almost every Western society, giving rise to ways of life that would have seemed unimaginably Orwellian just a month ago.
But in the United Kingdom, there is a unique growing concern around draconian tactics and overreach by police forces since Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced lockdown measures on March 23.
Police in the town of Warrington in northern England were criticized last weekend for issuing a citation to six people for a variety of apparently minor acts. One recipient was "out for a drive due to boredom," the force said on Twitter Sunday, while a group of people from the same household were stopped by officers for "going to the shops for non-essential items."
Several other forces have publicized details of their own similarly eager responses; which include the conventional, like spot road checks on drivers, and the bizarre, like staining areas of natural beauty with black dye to deter visitors.
UK coronavirus outbreak shows early signs of slowing, expert says, but restrictions may last for six months
Meanwhile, a trade body for convenience store workers said "heavy-handed" officers were telling shopkeepers they couldn't stock non-essential items like Easter eggs, lashing out at "overzealous enforcement and a misreading of the rules."
The approach has led figures from across the political spectrum to raise concerns, with some warning that British policing risks slipping into territory usually occupied by authoritarian regimes and dictatorships.
"This is what a police state is like," Jonathan Sumption, a former UK Supreme Court justice, told BBC Radio on Monday. "It is a state in which a government can issue orders or express preferences with no legal authority, and the police will enforce ministers' wishes."
Legislation speedily introduced last week allows officers to fine people gathering in groups of more than two or leaving their homes without a good reason, and the measures are less severe than in several other countries.
But those increased powers have nonetheless created an awkward dynamic in a country where police do not carry arms, and where the friendly caricature of a "bobby on the beat" still resonates.
The confusion is only heightened by the fact that Britain's lockdown is looser than those in countries such as Italy or Spain. People are permitted to leave their homes to shop for basic necessities, exercise, providing medical services, or going to work if it is absolutely vital.
Futher uncertainty has arisen because the rules are being interpreted differently -- including by the UK government. When he announced the restrictions, Johnson said that people would be permitted to leave their homes to take one form of exercise a day. That guidance is repeated on the government's website.
But the regulations themselves do not specify a number or type of exercise, saying only that people are permitted to leave "to take exercise either alone or with other members of their household."
The Transport Secretary, Grant Shapps, told BBC Radio on Tuesday that people should not drive to a rural location to to take their dog for a walk -- but that's not banned in the regulations, either.
It's led to an unclear situation in the United Kingdom where individual police forces are filling in the blanks -- and, in many cases, attracting criticism.

Police urged to maintain public trust

Widespread debate about police coronavirus tactics first emerged last week, when Derbyshire's force posted a video of drone footage showing unwitting people walking through the area's Peak District National Park.
The clip highlighted a number of vehicles at a roadside stop, before featuring a couple walking their dog, and another man going for a walk by himself.
It did not appear obvious that either party was flouting the government's guidelines on outdoor exercise. But the guidelines also warn against traveling, leading Derbyshire Police's video to label the trips "not essential," sparking a backlash online.
"We understand that people will have differing views about this post, however, we will not be apologetic for using any legal and appropriate methods to keep people safe," the force responded on Twitter.
Since then, numerous examples of strict crackdowns have been highlighted -- usually by police forces themselves, which have publicized their methods on social media, including spot checks on road users.
In North Yorkshire, police published a photo showing a group of officers stopping a car. "This driver was making an essential journey, unfortunately others are not," they wrote.
Sensing the mounting concern over officers' approach, one of the UK's most senior police officers urged colleagues on Monday to maintain "the trust and confidence of the public."
"How we police this pandemic will be remembered for many years to come," assistant commissioner Neil Basu wrote in an opinion piece in The Telegraph newspaper.
Criticism of police methods has been far from universal, and those ignoring social distancing rules by gathering in parks or holding parties have equally been the targets of public anger.
Shapps, the Transport Secretary, told Sky News on Tuesday that "the police are doing a difficult job and they are doing it well," though he added: "I am sure there are individual examples where perhaps you look at it and think that is perhaps a bit further than they should have gone."
And in defense of her London officers, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick said on radio station LBC on Monday that her workforce was "adopting a very collaborative approach with the public."
"I would also ask all citizens, where they feel it safe and appropriate, to encourage members of their family and people they know to learn about the restrictions and to comply with them," Dick added, a recommendation that does little to dispel confusion about the restrictions themselves.

Calls for clarity

Media reports on Tuesday suggested that the UK's National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) was issuing new guidelines to forces in the wake of mounting complaints, although a spokesperson for the NPCC disputed those suggestions in an email to CNN.
"We are not rewriting our guidance. It remains the same as it was. Engage, explain, encourage and finally enforce," the spokesperson said. "This is a fast changing situation and we, along with the public, are adapting as we go forward."
Police officers from North Yorkshire Police stop motorists on Monday to check that their travel is essential.
Nonetheless, some legal experts have pointed to widespread confusion and an overly harsh interpretation of the government's lockdown measures as the cause of alleged overreach.
"Some police think that their job is to enforce the government's guidance, when in fact their job is to enforce the law," Raphael Hogarth, an associate at the Institute for Government think tank, said on Twitter. "The law is that you may not leave home without a reasonable excuse. The legislation gives non-exhaustive examples of such excuses."
"Some police forces seem to be using their powers without any regard to the purpose for which these powers were conferred," he added. "The purpose of the legislation is to stop the virus spreading, by stopping unnecessary inter-household contact."
How can Boris Johnson run the UK while suffering from coronavirus?
Indeed, confusion about what is and is not enforceable in the government's hastily-prepared lockdown legislation has been apparent even among lawmakers.
Labour MP Stephen Kinnock fell foul of his local police force after posting a picture showing him celebrating the birthday of his father -- the now-retired former leader of the opposition Labour Party, Neil Kinnock.
"We know celebrating your Dad's birthday is a lovely thing to do, however this is not essential travel," South Wales police told him over Twitter. Although Kinnock was sitting a sizable distance from his parents, the government's restrictions specify that people should not visit relatives unless it is essential.
"We need to be really careful here," Liberal Democrat lawmaker Layla Moran said on Twitter, responding to complaints that convenience stores were being told they could not stock "non-essential" Easter eggs.
"Making a trip only for an Easter egg is clearly against the rules. But picking one up with the bigger shop for the kids? The Government needs to give sharper guidance for (local authorities) and Police on the application of the new laws," she added.

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2020-03-31 16:34:03Z
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