Senin, 06 April 2020

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson Moved to Intensive Care - The Wall Street Journal

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was moved to intensive care at 7 p.m. U.K. time as a precautionary step, an official said.

Photo: Peter Summers/Getty Images

LONDON—British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to intensive care at a London hospital Monday evening as his health turned for the worse nearly two weeks after being diagnosed with the new coronavirus.

The 55-year-old went to a Central London hospital on Sunday after struggling with a persistent cough and fever. An official said the prime minister was still conscious when taken to intensive care, at around 7 p.m. Monday evening U.K. time, adding the move was precautionary to enable Mr. Johnson to get ventilation if he needed it.

Mr. Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to function as his deputy, the government said in a statement.

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Mr. Johnson’s worsening health comes at a crucial time for the nation, with the virus expected to peak in the U.K. in the coming week and questions being asked over how the country’s continued lockdown will be handled.

Mr. Johnson spent the past week putting a brave face on the situation, working while isolated in his study in Downing Street and communicating with the country via self-recorded videos. However, after he continued to suffer from a persistent cough and temperature, doctors advised that he be admitted to St. Thomas’s Hospital for further tests on Sunday night. On Monday morning, aides said Mr. Johnson had been in touch with Downing Street and was still actively running the country.

Should Mr. Johnson’s health continue to deteriorate, it could raise a constitutional headache at a crucial moment in the U.K.’s battle against the virus. Britain doesn’t have the equivalent to a vice president who automatically takes over if the prime minister dies.

Mr. Johnson eased the transition by deputizing Mr. Raab before he sickened. But if Mr Raab becomes incapacitated, it would be up to the members of the U.K. cabinet to decide among themselves who should lead the country. “It really depends on everyone just accepting that that person has the same authority,” said Catherine Haddon, a constitutional expert at the Institute for Government.

In time, in a process that could take months, the ruling Conservative Party would choose a new leader who would become prime minister.

Related Video

Officials in the U.K., Brazil, Iran and several other countries have tested positive for coronavirus, raising questions about world leaders' exposure to the pandemic. Here are some of the challenges governments face as they ponder contingency plans. Photo: Karen Ducey/Getty Images

Mr. Raab led Monday’s morning cabinet’s civil contingencies meeting in Mr. Johnson’s stead. The foreign secretary also led a press conference on Monday afternoon, where he reiterated that Mr. Johnson was still running the country. However, Mr. Raab said he hadn’t talked to the British leader since Saturday.

The British government initially took a laissez-faire approach to the illness, eschewing some of the more stringent clampdowns being imposed across Europe in an effort to minimize disruption.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will lead Britain’s cabinet while Mr. Johnson is in hospital.

Photo: Dominic Lipinski/Zuma Press

The government’s pandemic plan, which was crafted by scientists over the last two decades, played down the need to rush to shut schools and ban mass gatherings, arguing they did little to stop a virus’s spread.

Meanwhile, British epidemiologists initially underestimated how many people could require intensive care if they got ill, according to officials. Worried that the British public wouldn’t isolate for weeks on end, the government reasoned it was better to wait until the virus’s spread was accelerating to impose a lockdown.

Even as evidence mounted about the seriousness of the virus’s spread, Britain’s crowded Parliament and the warren of buildings around Downing Street, where Mr. Johnson both lives and works, were humming with people.

“I am shaking hands continuously,” Mr. Johnson said at the start of March. “I was at a hospital the other night where there were actually a few coronavirus patients and I shook hands with everybody.”

Downing Street continued to operate much as normal with briefings in the state room and meetings convened around crowded tables in the building’s drawing rooms.

On March 16 scientists advising the government concluded that the clampdown needed to be accelerated following a series of reports by modelers showing the National Health Service would quickly be swamped.

Even after Mr. Johnson locked down the country on March 23, he continued to attend cabinet in person. The same week he fell ill Mr. Johnson attended a “virtual” cabinet meeting, sitting with both the health secretary and the country’s most senior civil servant.

Police outside St.Thomas's Hospital in London, where the prime minister is being treated for coronavirus.

Photo: andy rain/Shutterstock

The virus then spread through his top team. Mr. Johnson’s chief of staff Dominic Cummings and the country’s chief medical officer, Chris Whitty, isolated with symptoms. The health secretary, Matt Hancock, subsequently fell ill.

Mr. Johnson’s pregnant fiancée, Carrie Symonds, said she has also suffered symptoms of the virus. Most of Mr. Johnson’s team is back at work and Ms. Symonds tweeted over the weekend that she was now feeling stronger. Mr. Cummings isn’t back in Downing Street yet but is working.

Mr. Johnson put on a brave face once in isolation. He published a series of videos in which he said he had mild symptoms.

However, people who were in contact with him in the middle of last week were expressing concern about his well-being. Mr. Johnson continued to lead cabinet meetings via video link in his study.

He also appeared outside his door in Downing Street on Thursday to join a nationwide applause of National Health Service workers. The government insisted that his symptoms were still mild but admitted his condition wasn’t improving.

By Friday a pale-looking Mr. Johnson told the nation via a self-filmed video that he would continue to isolate because of a persistent fever. At 8 p.m. on Sunday, as Queen Elizabeth addressed the nation imploring people to follow social-distancing guidelines, Mr. Johnson was driven to hospital for tests.

Mr. Johnson’s government is currently working to ramp up tests for the virus, after failing to stockpile the necessary equipment before the virus struck.

On Monday it confirmed that millions of antibody tests it had ordered, which would check if people had gained immunity to Covid-19, didn’t function properly. The government is in discussion with manufacturers to refine them, an official said.

The last prime minister to have to sound out his cabinet for a successor while ill was Harold MacMillan in 1963. He resigned shortly after.

Any replacement to Mr. Johnson would need to be named by the Queen, requiring the cabinet to agree among themselves who can best command support of the country. That leader would likely be an interim prime minister until the ruling Conservative Party could choose a new head.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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2020-04-06 20:40:50Z
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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson Moved to Intensive Care - The Wall Street Journal

LONDON—British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to intensive care at a London hospital Monday as he struggles to recover from the new coronavirus.

The British government said in a statement that Mr. Johnson’s condition had worsened over the afternoon. The 55-year-old had been admitted to hospital on Sunday after suffering persistent symptoms from Covid-19 for 10 days. Mr. Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to deputize for him, the government said.

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2020-04-06 19:53:00Z
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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson Moved to Intensive Care - The Wall Street Journal

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson participating in a national ‘clap for carers’ on April 2, after he had tested positive for coronavirus and was in self isolation.

Photo: pippa fowles/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

LONDON—British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to intensive care at a London hospital Monday as he struggles to recover from the new coronavirus.

The British government said in a statement that Mr. Johnson’s condition had worsened over the afternoon. The 55-year-old had been admitted to hospital on Sunday after suffering persistent symptoms from Covid-19 for 10 days. Mr. Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to deputize for him, the government said.

An official said that the prime minister remained conscious and was moved to intensive care at 7 p.m. U.K. time (2 p.m. EDT) as a precautionary step.

Earlier Monday, a government spokesman said Mr. Johnson had a “comfortable night” and was “in good spirits” in St. Thomas’ hospital in central London, receiving briefings and contacting members of his team.

With Mr. Johnson absent, Mr. Raab had already held Monday morning’s government crisis-response meeting.

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“I’m in good spirits and keeping in touch with my team, as we work together to fight this virus and keep everyone safe,” said a tweet from Mr. Johnson’s verified account earlier Monday.

Mr. Johnson’s illness has come at a critical time for the government as it faces the worst health crisis in a century. The virus’s effects are expected to peak in the U.K. as soon as this weekend and questions are growing about the government’s belated decision to lock down the country and how the restrictions can eventually be eased.

The number of confirmed cases and deaths in the U.K. has been climbing rapidly, though data released Monday showed the number of new cases falling from Sunday and 439 deaths related to Covid-19 in the previous 24 hours, the lowest daily figure so far in April. But scientists note that fatalities are a lagging indicator of the spread of the pandemic.

“It really is too soon to see the effects of the big changes we’ve all made to our lives,” Angela McLean, the government’s deputy chief scientific adviser said. She pointed out that the lockdown measures came into effect only two weeks ago and that it can take several weeks before an infected person’s symptoms worsen enough for them to need hospitalization.

Britain doesn’t have the equivalent of a vice president who automatically takes over if the prime minister dies. It is up to the members of the U.K. cabinet to decide among themselves who should lead the country if the prime minister dies or falls gravely ill.

Related Video

Officials in the U.K., Brazil, Iran and several other countries have tested positive for coronavirus, raising questions about world leaders' exposure to the pandemic. Here are some of the challenges governments face as they ponder contingency plans. Photo: Karen Ducey/Getty Images

“It really depends on everyone just accepting that person has the same authority,” said Catherine Haddon, a constitutional expert at the Institute for Government.

Mr. Johnson smoothed some potential difficulties by designating Mr. Raab lead the cabinet in his stead. Should Mr. Raab in turn fall ill, the prime minister could—if he is able to—pick another member of his cabinet to replace him.

The British government initially took a laissez-faire approach to the illness, eschewing some of the more stringent clampdowns that were being imposed across Europe in an effort to minimize disruption.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will lead Britain’s cabinet while Mr. Johnson is in hospital.

Photo: Dominic Lipinski/Zuma Press

The government’s pandemic plan, which was crafted by scientists over the last two decades, played down the need to rush to shut schools and ban mass gatherings, arguing they did little to stop a virus’s spread.

Meanwhile, British epidemiologists initially underestimated how many people could require intensive care if they got ill, according to officials. Worried that the British public wouldn’t isolate for weeks on end, the government reasoned it was better to wait until the virus’s spread was accelerating to impose a lockdown.

Even as evidence mounted about the seriousness of the virus’s spread, Britain’s crowded parliament and the warren of buildings around Downing Street, where Mr. Johnson both lives and works, were humming with people.

“I am shaking hands continuously,” Mr. Johnson said at the start of March. “I was at a hospital the other night where there were actually a few coronavirus patients and I shook hands with everybody.”

Downing Street continued to operate much as normal with briefings in the state room and meetings convened around crowded tables in the building’s drawing rooms.

On March 16 scientists advising the government concluded that the clampdown needed to be accelerated following a series of reports by modelers showing the National Health Service would quickly be swamped.

Even after Mr. Johnson locked down the country on March 23, he continued to attend cabinet in person. The same week he fell ill Mr. Johnson attended a “virtual” cabinet meeting sitting with both the health secretary and the country’s most senior civil servant.

Police outside St.Thomas's Hospital in London, where the prime minister is being treated for coronavirus.

Photo: andy rain/Shutterstock

The virus then spread through his top team. Mr. Johnson’s chief of staff Dominic Cummings and the country’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty isolated with symptoms. The health secretary, Matt Hancock, subsequently fell ill.

Mr. Johnson’s pregnant fiancée, Carrie Symonds, said she has also suffered symptoms of the virus. Most of Mr. Johnson’s team is back at work and Ms. Symonds tweeted at the weekend that she was now feeling stronger. Mr. Cummings isn’t back in Downing Street yet but is working.

Mr. Johnson put on a brave face once in isolation. He published a series of videos in which he said he had mild symptoms.

However, people who were in contact with him mid-last week were expressing concern about his well-being. Mr. Johnson continued to lead cabinet meetings via video link in his study.

He also appeared outside his door in Downing Street on Thursday to join a nationwide applause of National Health Service workers. The government insisted that his symptoms were still mild but admitted his condition wasn’t improving.

By Friday a pale-looking Mr. Johnson told the nation via a self-filmed video that he would continue to isolate because of a persistent fever. At 8 p.m. on Sunday, as Queen Elizabeth addressed the nation imploring people to follow social-distancing guidelines, Mr. Johnson was driven to hospital for tests.

Mr. Johnson’s government is currently working to ramp up tests for the virus, after failing to stockpile the necessary equipment before the virus struck.

On Monday it confirmed that millions of antibody tests it had ordered, which would check if people had gained immunity to Covid-19, didn’t function properly. The government is in discussion with manufacturers to refine them, an official said.

The last prime minister to have to sound out his cabinet for a successor while ill was Harold MacMillan in 1963. He resigned shortly after.

Any replacement to Mr. Johnson would need to be named by the Queen, requiring the cabinet to agree among themselves who can best command support of the country. That leader would likely be an interim prime minister until the ruling Conservative Party could choose a new head.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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2020-04-06 19:47:00Z
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As U.K. Battles to Contain Coronavirus, Boris Johnson Remains in Hospital - The Wall Street Journal

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson participating in a national ‘clap for carers’ on April 2, after he had tested positive for coronavirus and was in self isolation.

Photo: pippa fowles/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

LONDON—British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was leading the British government from his hospital bed on Monday, the government said, as the country’s health system braced for the crisis caused by the new coronavirus to reach its crescendo.

Mr. Johnson, 55, who was taken to a hospital on Sunday night for tests after being in isolation for 10 days, has been suffering persistent symptoms from Covid-19, including a high temperature. Mr. Johnson had a “comfortable night” and “is in good spirits” in St. Thomas’ hospital in central London, receiving briefings and contacting members of his team, a government spokesman said.

With Mr. Johnson absent, the prime minister’s designated stand-in, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, held Monday morning’s government crisis-response meeting. But the spokesman said Mr. Johnson was still making key decisions on the government’s coronavirus strategy.

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“He’s in charge,” Mr. Raab said Monday of Mr. Johnson. He added that the government is working “full throttle” to follow Mr. Johnson’s instructions. But he said he hadn’t spoken to the prime minister since Saturday.

Asked whether the prime minister should step back from a full-time role to concentrate on recovery, Mr. Raab said Mr. Johnson will follow medical advice.

“I’m in good spirits and keeping in touch with my team, as we work together to fight this virus and keep everyone safe,” said a tweet from Mr. Johnson’s verified account on Monday.

Mr. Johnson’s illness has come at a critical time for the government as it faces the worst health crisis in a century. The virus’s effects are expected to peak in the U.K. as soon as this weekend and questions are growing about the government’s belated decision to lock down the country and how the restrictions can eventually be eased.

The number of confirmed cases and deaths in the U.K. has been climbing rapidly, though data released Monday showed the number of new cases falling from Sunday and 439 deaths related to Covid-19 in the previous 24 hours, the lowest daily figure so far in April. But scientists note that fatalities are a lagging indicator of the spread of the pandemic.

“It really is too soon to see the effects of the big changes we’ve all made to our lives,” Angela McLean, the government’s deputy chief scientific adviser said. She pointed out that the lockdown measures came into effect only two weeks ago and that it can take several weeks before an infected person’s symptoms worsen enough for them to need hospitalization.

Britain doesn’t have the equivalent of a vice president who automatically takes over if the prime minister dies. It is up to the members of the U.K. cabinet to decide among themselves who should lead the country if the prime minister dies or falls gravely ill.

Related Video

Officials in the U.K., Brazil, Iran and several other countries have tested positive for coronavirus, raising questions about world leaders' exposure to the pandemic. Here are some of the challenges governments face as they ponder contingency plans. Photo: Karen Ducey/Getty Images

. “It really depends on everyone just accepting that person has the same authority,” said Catherine Haddon, a constitutional expert at the Institute for Government.

Mr. Johnson has smoothed some potential difficulties by designating Mr. Raab lead the cabinet in his stead. Should Mr. Raab in turn fall ill, the prime minister could—if he is able to—pick another member of his cabinet to replace him.

The British government initially took a laissez-faire approach to the illness, eschewing some of the more stringent clampdowns that were being imposed across Europe in an effort to minimize disruption.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will lead Britain’s cabinet while Mr. Johnson is in hospital.

Photo: Dominic Lipinski/Zuma Press

The government’s pandemic plan, which was crafted by scientists over the last two decades, played down the need to rush to shut schools and ban mass gatherings, arguing they did little to stop a virus’s spread.

Meanwhile, British epidemiologists initially underestimated how many people could require intensive care if they got ill, according to officials. Worried that the British public wouldn’t isolate for weeks on end, the government reasoned it was better to wait until the virus’s spread was accelerating to impose a lockdown.

Even as evidence mounted about the seriousness of the virus’s spread, Britain’s crowded parliament and the warren of buildings around Downing Street, where Mr. Johnson both lives and works, were humming with people.

“I am shaking hands continuously,” Mr. Johnson said at the start of March. “I was at a hospital the other night where there were actually a few coronavirus patients and I shook hands with everybody.”

Downing Street continued to operate much as normal with briefings in the state room and meetings convened around crowded tables in the building’s drawing rooms.

On March 16 scientists advising the government concluded that the clampdown needed to be accelerated following a series of reports by modelers showing the National Health Service would quickly be swamped.

Even after Mr. Johnson locked down the country on March 23, he continued to attend cabinet in person. The same week he fell ill Mr. Johnson attended a “virtual” cabinet meeting sitting with both the health secretary and the country’s most senior civil servant.

Police outside St.Thomas's Hospital in London, where the prime minister is being treated for coronavirus.

Photo: andy rain/Shutterstock

The virus then spread through his top team. Mr. Johnson’s chief of staff Dominic Cummings and the country’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty isolated with symptoms. The health secretary, Matt Hancock, subsequently fell ill.

Mr. Johnson’s pregnant fiancée, Carrie Symonds, said she has also suffered symptoms of the virus. Most of Mr. Johnson’s team is back at work and Ms. Symonds tweeted at the weekend that she was now feeling stronger. Mr. Cummings isn’t back in Downing Street yet but is working.

Mr. Johnson put on a brave face once in isolation. He published a series of videos in which he said he had mild symptoms.

However, people who were in contact with him mid-last week were expressing concern about his well-being. Mr. Johnson continued to lead cabinet meetings via video link in his study.

He also appeared outside his door in Downing Street on Thursday to join a nationwide applause of National Health Service workers. The government insisted that his symptoms were still mild but admitted his condition wasn’t improving.

By Friday a pale-looking Mr. Johnson told the nation via a self-filmed video that he would continue to isolate because of a persistent fever. At 8 p.m. on Sunday, as Queen Elizabeth addressed the nation imploring people to follow social-distancing guidelines, Mr. Johnson was driven to hospital for tests.

Mr. Johnson’s government is currently working to ramp up tests for the virus, after failing to stockpile the necessary equipment before the virus struck.

On Monday it confirmed that millions of antibody tests it had ordered, which would check if people had gained immunity to Covid-19, didn’t function properly. The government is in discussion with manufacturers to refine them, an official said.

The last prime minister to have to sound out his cabinet for a successor while ill was Harold MacMillan in 1963. He resigned shortly after.

Any replacement to Mr. Johnson would need to be named by the Queen, requiring the cabinet to agree among themselves who can best command support of the country. That leader would likely be an interim prime minister until the ruling Conservative Party could choose a new head.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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2020-04-06 17:40:45Z
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Miss England, Bhasha Mukherjee, returns to UK to work as NHS doctor - CNN

Bhasha Mukherjee took a career break as a junior doctor after competing in the Miss World pageant in December 2019. Mukherjee represented England at the pageant after winning Miss England.
Miss Jamaica crowned 2019 Miss World
Invited to be an ambassador for several charities, Mukherjee had planned to hang up her stethoscope and focus on humanitarian work until August this year.
"I was invited to Africa, to Turkey, then to India, Pakistan and several other Asian countries to be an ambassador for various charity work," she told CNN.
At the beginning of March, the 24-year-old had been in India for four weeks on behalf of Coventry Mercia Lions Club, a development and community charity for which she was ambassador. They visited schools with donations of stationery, and also gave money to a home for abandoned girls.
But as the coronavirus situation worsened back home in the UK, Mukherjee was getting messages from former colleagues at her old hospital, the Pilgrim Hospital in Boston, eastern England, telling her how hard the situation was for them.
Mukherjee contacted the hospital's management team to let them know that she wanted to return to work.
Bhasha Mukherjee was crowned Miss England in August 2019.
She told CNN that it felt wrong to be wearing her Miss England crown, even for humanitarian work, while people around the world were dying from coronavirus and her colleagues were working so hard.
"When you are doing all this humanitarian work abroad, you're still expected to put the crown on, get ready... look pretty."
But, she added: "I wanted to come back home. I wanted to come and go straight to work."
Mukherjee, who moved to the English city of Derby from Kolkata at the age of 9, said: "I felt a sense of this is what I'd got this degree for and what better time to be part of this particular sector than now."
A model was disqualified from Miss World for being a mother. Now she's pushing back
"It was incredible the way the whole world was celebrating all key workers, and I wanted to be one of those, and I knew I could help," she said.
And so Mukherjee returned to the UK on Wednesday after working with the British High Commission in Kolkata to find a flight from India to Frankfurt, then to London.
"There's no better time for me to be Miss England and helping England at a time of need," she said.
Mukherjee is self-isolating for one to two weeks until she can return to work as a doctor at the Pilgrim Hospital. She specializes in respiratory medicine but said doctors are currently being rotated to wherever they are needed.
As of Monday, the UK had recorded more than 48,000 cases of the novel coronavirus and nearly 5,000 deaths, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.
CNN has reached out to the Pilgrim Hospital for comment.

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2020-04-06 17:25:02Z
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