Senin, 04 Mei 2020

Ban on canteens and staff to wear masks in offices under draft Government plan for new workplace rules - The Sun

CANTEENS could be closed and masks worn in offices under draft Government plans for the new workplace rules.

Brits are facing massive changes when they go back to work as employers are urged to minimise the risk of a second peak.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

 Brits will be asked to wear masks in the office under new plans for a return to work

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Brits will be asked to wear masks in the office under new plans for a return to workCredit: EPA

According to the BBC, restrictions being eased will see companies told to minimise the amount of staff using equipment, stagger shift times and maximise home-working.

The draft strategy also calls for physical screens and the use of protective equipment when staff cannot work two metres from each other.

Staff will also be told to avoid sharing pens and avoid face-to-face meetings.

Speaking this morning, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace insisted there were many ways Brits could reduce the risk while back in work.

He told Sky News: "You can look at shielding, you can look at how long you stay near people. The two-metre rule reduces the possibility of infection by a certain amount of time.

"If you halve that it still keeps people away from being infected but for a lesser time. The probability of being infected is much less.

"I think there are options about how we can do it. You can wear PPE, that could be a possibility if you have to be in close proximity or indeed you could find other ways of doing it."

He also pointed towards supermarket workers working behind "shields".

 A London chemist wears a mask and uses a screen to stay safe

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A London chemist wears a mask and uses a screen to stay safe
 A Vauxhall car factory's social distancing measures

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A Vauxhall car factory's social distancing measures
 Members of staff at the Vauxhall car factory demonstrating distancing measures

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Members of staff at the Vauxhall car factory demonstrating distancing measures
 Brits will have to sit apart

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Brits will have to sit apart
 Canteens could be closed

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Canteens could be closed

Join our George Cross campaign for NHS staff

We are urging Sun readers to sign a petition calling for our NHS staff to be awarded the George Cross.

We are backing a proposal by Lord Ashcroft to honour our health heroes with the gallantry gong given for acts of bravery that did not take place in battle.

A No10 spokesman said: “The NHS is doing a fantastic job and the nation will want to find a way to say thank you when we have defeated this virus.” SAS hero Andy McNab added: “The award of a George Cross would show an emotional appreciation.”

We are asking our readers to please sign the petition below.

Companies could also be asked to lay on more parking spaces so staff don't have to rely on lifts from colleagues.

Under the plans, millions of companies will be required to draw up a “risk assessment” before staff can return.

Under the section marked “PPE”, it just promises more detail will follow.

Stores such as Aldi and Waitrose are already using the screens to protect staff, as well as limiting the number of customers.

Companies will also be urged to limit the number of people in lifts, and ensure social distancing is maintained in every area.

Speaking today, Sage member and director of research charity Wellcome Trust Sir Jeremy Farrar claimed there is "nothing magical" about the two metre rule.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It's based on old data about how far when we cough and we sneeze that the droplets and the aerosols that may come from that spread.

"There's nothing magical about two metres. Perhaps more importantly is the time you spend in contact with somebody else. Not just the distance but also the time."

The Prime Minister will reveal his "roadmap" out of lockdown this Sunday.

Last week Boris Johnson announced the public will be asked to wear face masks when lockdown measures are lifted as they are "useful".

The PM confirmed The Sun's story that scientists have advised they can have an effect on stopping the spread of the bug.

Michael Gove yesterday declared any changes will be “staged” and not a “flick of the switch”.

Most companies have been shut down since the lockdown was brought in on March 23.

Ministers will review those restrictions by Thursday.

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Boris Johnson says fear of never seeing his new son gave him strength to beat coronavirus

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2020-05-04 08:21:22Z
CAIiENxwO15oWXjP7JOzg50t7skqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow0Ij8CjCRwIgDMOSMzAU

Firms won't need to enforce 2m 'social distancing' rules if other precautions in place - Daily Mail

No hot desking or shared pens and staggered start times – but firms will NOT have to enforce 2m 'social distancing' as long as they can show they are keeping staff safe, according to leaked draft of lockdown 'exit strategy' to be revealed Sunday

  • Boris Johnson is delaying unveiling the government's coronavirus exit strategy from Thursday until Sunday
  • Leaked draft suggests companies will not always be obliged to enforce two metre social distancing rules 
  • There will be flexibility if other protections are put in place such as screens and tough hygiene processes 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
Advertisement

Road map for exiting coronavirus lockdown 

A leaked draft has revealed more details of the shape of the next phase of coronavirus curbs - due to be unveiled by Boris Johnson on Sunday. 

Key points include: 

  • Flexibility around the two metre 'social distancing' rule as long as firms are taking other steps to protect workers.
  • Installing screens, strict hygiene procedures, and ensuring people are not close together very long are touted as alternative safeguards. 
  • Offices will be ordered to overhaul their rotas, staggering start, finish and break times.
  • Hot desking will need to end and sharing equipment kept to an absolute minimum. 
  • Staff considered vulnerable who cannot work from home should be put in the 'safest possible roles'. 

Businesses will not have to enforce two-metre 'social distancing' rules when coronavirus lockdown eases - as long as they can show they are keeping staff safe.

The shape of the 'road map' out of the crippling restrictions has started to emerge, with a leaked draft suggesting it will recognise that keeping gaps between workers is not always possible.

Instead companies will be advised they can take other precautions such as installing screens and imposing strict hygiene procedures.

Meanwhile, offices will be told to overhaul their rotas to minimise risks by staggering arrival, break and departure times, ending hot desking and avoiding sharing equipment. 

Boris Johnson is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall. 

Ministers have been under massive pressure to set out the way forward, with the draconian current curbs estimated to be costing the country £2billion a day.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that that protective screens and ensuring people were not close together for very long could reduce the need for strict distancing. 

'You can look at shielding, you can look at how long you stay near people. The two-metre rule reduces the possibility of infection by a certain amount of time,' he said.

'If you halve that it still keeps people away from being infected but for a lesser time. The probability of being infected is much less.

'I think there are options about how we can do it. You can wear PPE, that could be a possibility if you have to be in close proximity or indeed you could find other ways of doing it.'

He pointed towards supermarket workers working behind 'shields'. 

Sir Jeremy Farrar, a SAGE member and head of the Wellcome Trust, said there was 'nothing magical' about the tw metre advice, and it was based on long-standing evidence about how far coughs and sneezes were likely to travel.

'There is nothing magical about two metres,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. 'Perhaps more importantly is the time you spend near someone else.' 

In other developments in the coronavirus crisis 

  • Education Secretary Gavin Williamson announced a package of support worth almost £3billion to help universities weather the coronavirus crisis; 
  • A smartphone app to trace the spread of coronavirus will be trialled on the Isle of Wight this week before being rolled out more widely later this month; 
  • A new 'fast and accurate' coronavirus antibody test has been developed by scientists in Edinburgh, although the company fears the NHS could miss out amid interest in Europe for the machines; 
  • Heathrow Airport has warned travellers could face queues a kilometre long to board flights;  
  • Former Government chief scientific adviser Sir David King has assembled a group of experts to look at how the UK could work its way out of the lockdown in response to concerns over the 'lack of transparency' coming from the Sage group of advisers.
Boris Johnson (pictured arriving at Downing Street this morning) is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall

Boris Johnson (pictured arriving at Downing Street this morning) is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall

The Tube was still busy today despite the strict lockdown rules in force - amid claims from unions that the government wants services back up to at least 85 per cent by May 18

The Tube was still busy today despite the strict lockdown rules in force - amid claims from unions that the government wants services back up to at least 85 per cent by May 18

Customers maintain social distancing as they wait to enter a supermarket in north London yesterday

Customers maintain social distancing as they wait to enter a supermarket in north London yesterday

Ministers 'in talks over immunity certificates for workers' amid hopes of antibody test 

Ministers are in discussions over coronavirus 'immunity certificates' for workers amid rising hopes of an antibody test. 

Paperwork that could show people are clear of the disease and unlikely to get it again could be deployed as part of efforts to get the economy up and running. 

The plans emerged amid suggestions an accurate antibody test could start being rolled out across the UK within a fortnight.

Testing giant Roche Diagnostics says that it has created a kit that is accurate enough to be used at scale - and the firm says it has enough stock to provide hundreds of thousands to the NHS every week.

It comes after weeks of disappointments regarding antibody tests, which are designed to tell someone if they have contracted the virus in the past and indicate whether they may now be immune.

Roche claims its lab-based 'Elecsys' test can spot 100 per cent of people who have had the virus - with no 'false negatives' at all. The test is important because it gives the clearest possible picture of how widespread the coronavirus is in the UK.

If many more people have had the illness than currently believed, fears of a second peak will diminish.

Mr Wallace effectively confirmed the draft, a version of which has been leaked to the BBC and Financial Times.

It suggested vulnerable staff - such as those aged over 70, pregnant, with underlying health conditions or pregnant - should be put in the 'safest possible roles'.

The guidance is clear that anyone who can work from home should continue to do so - meaning many staff will be out of the office for months to come.  

But the draft does not spell out what action should be taken on PPE - saying merely that more information will follow. Some businesses fear they might be open to legal action from staff if they loosen the rules without clear direction from the government. 

Mr Wallace played down concerns that 'coronaphobia' could hamper efforts to get the economy running again, with polls showing significant numbers would be nervous about returning to work.

The Defence Secretary said: 'I strongly believe the public aren't stupid. They read advice, they listen to the media.

'They took on board the Government's advice... and I think they will be perfectly able to read the Government's next stage when we get to it.

'I'm totally confident when it comes to the next step we will all together be able to move forward.'

Mr Johnson will describe the race to develop a coronavirus vaccine as the 'most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes' later as he calls on nations to 'pull together' in response to the pandemic.

The Prime Minister is expected to tell an online pledging conference - co-hosted by the UK and eight other countries and organisations - that the sooner states share their expertise the faster scientists will succeed in defeating the disease.

It comes as Mr Johnson revealed he feared he would not live to see his baby son Wilfred born when he battled Covid-19 in intensive care last month.

The PM will tell the conference, which aims to bring in more than £6.6billion in funding, that the race to develop a vaccine is 'not a competition between countries but the most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes'.

'It's humanity against the virus - we are in this together and together we will prevail,' he is expected to say.

Unions warn on plans to restore rail services 

The country's three biggest rail unions have today written to Boris Johnson, warning that increasing train services will be 'dangerous and lead to the public flouting the rules.'

Union leaders have voiced 'severe concerns' over any moves to increase train services as part of the expected easing of the economic lockdown.

RMT’s Mick Lynch told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that ministers want to be running 85%-100% of services within a fortnight despite it not being ‘safe’.

The three main rail unions Aslef, RMT and TSSA, have now written to the Prime Minister warning that increasing services would send out a 'mixed message' that it is okay to travel by train, despite official advice suggesting otherwise.

Coronavirus has claimed more than 246,000 lives around the world, according to analysis by John Hopkins University.

A total of 28,446 people have died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Saturday. 

Meanwhile, the government is facing fresh pressure over testing, after the daily number slumped to 76,496 - below the 100,000 target. 

Cabinet minister Michael Gove told the daily Downing Street press conference last night: 'Ultimately, unless and until we have a vaccine then I suspect that we are going to have to live with some degree of constraint because of the nature of the virus.

'But we obviously want to, wherever possible, and consistent with the measures on public health, restore people's lives to as close to normal as possible.'

He said the Government will pursue a 'phased approach' to removing lockdown restrictions rather than a sudden return to 'the old normal' - and that the easing had to be done in a 'cautious fashion'.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that the two metre rule could be more flexible

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that the two metre rule could be more flexible

 

 

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2020-05-04 08:05:38Z
52780764783096

Firms won't need to enforce 2m 'social distancing' rules if other precautions in place - Daily Mail

No hot desking or shared pens and staggered start times – but firms will NOT have to enforce 2m 'social distancing' as long as they can show they are keeping staff safe, according to leaked draft of lockdown 'exit strategy' to be revealed Sunday

  • Boris Johnson is delaying unveiling the government's coronavirus exit strategy from Thursday until Sunday
  • Leaked draft suggests companies will not always be obliged to enforce two metre social distancing rules 
  • There will be flexibility if other protections are put in place such as screens and tough hygiene processes 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
Advertisement

Road map for exiting coronavirus lockdown 

A leaked draft has revealed more details of the shape of the next phase of coronavirus curbs - due to be unveiled by Boris Johnson on Sunday. 

Key points include: 

  • Flexibility around the two metre 'social distancing' rule as long as firms are taking other steps to protect workers.
  • Installing screens, strict hygiene procedures, and ensuring people are not close together very long are touted as alternative safeguards. 
  • Offices will be ordered to overhaul their rotas, staggering start, finish and break times.
  • Hot desking will need to end and sharing equipment kept to an absolute minimum. 
  • Staff considered vulnerable who cannot work from home should be put in the 'safest possible roles'. 

Businesses will not have to enforce two-metre 'social distancing' rules when coronavirus lockdown eases - as long as they can show they are keeping staff safe.

The shape of the 'road map' out of the crippling restrictions has started to emerge, with a leaked draft suggesting it will recognise that keeping gaps between workers is not always possible.

Instead companies will be advised they can take other precautions such as installing screens and imposing strict hygiene procedures.

Meanwhile, offices will be told to overhaul their rotas to minimise risks by staggering arrival, break and departure times, ending hot desking and avoiding sharing equipment. 

Boris Johnson is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall. 

Ministers have been under massive pressure to set out the way forward, with the draconian current curbs estimated to be costing the country £2billion a day.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that that protective screens and ensuring people were not close together for very long could reduce the need for strict distancing. 

'You can look at shielding, you can look at how long you stay near people. The two-metre rule reduces the possibility of infection by a certain amount of time,' he said.

'If you halve that it still keeps people away from being infected but for a lesser time. The probability of being infected is much less.

'I think there are options about how we can do it. You can wear PPE, that could be a possibility if you have to be in close proximity or indeed you could find other ways of doing it.'

He pointed towards supermarket workers working behind 'shields'. 

Sir Jeremy Farrar, a SAGE member and head of the Wellcome Trust, said there was 'nothing magical' about the tw metre advice, and it was based on long-standing evidence about how far coughs and sneezes were likely to travel.

'There is nothing magical about two metres,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. 'Perhaps more importantly is the time you spend near someone else.' 

In other developments in the coronavirus crisis 

  • Education Secretary Gavin Williamson announced a package of support worth almost £3billion to help universities weather the coronavirus crisis; 
  • A smartphone app to trace the spread of coronavirus will be trialled on the Isle of Wight this week before being rolled out more widely later this month; 
  • A new 'fast and accurate' coronavirus antibody test has been developed by scientists in Edinburgh, although the company fears the NHS could miss out amid interest in Europe for the machines; 
  • Heathrow Airport has warned travellers could face queues a kilometre long to board flights;  
  • Former Government chief scientific adviser Sir David King has assembled a group of experts to look at how the UK could work its way out of the lockdown in response to concerns over the 'lack of transparency' coming from the Sage group of advisers.
Boris Johnson (pictured arriving at Downing Street this morning) is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall

Boris Johnson (pictured arriving at Downing Street this morning) is expected to unveil the exit strategy in an address to the nation on Sunday, having delayed the announcement from Thursday as frantic work continues in Whitehall

The Tube was still busy today despite the strict lockdown rules in force - amid claims from unions that the government wants services back up to at least 85 per cent by May 18

The Tube was still busy today despite the strict lockdown rules in force - amid claims from unions that the government wants services back up to at least 85 per cent by May 18

Customers maintain social distancing as they wait to enter a supermarket in north London yesterday

Customers maintain social distancing as they wait to enter a supermarket in north London yesterday

Mr Wallace effectively confirmed the draft, a version of which has been leaked to the BBC and Financial Times.

It suggested vulnerable staff - such as those aged over 70, pregnant, with underlying health conditions or pregnant - should be put in the "safest possible roles".

The guidance is clear that anyone who can work from home should continue to do so - meaning many staff will be out of the office for months to come.  

Mr Johnson will describe the race to develop a coronavirus vaccine as the 'most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes' later as he calls on nations to 'pull together' in response to the pandemic.

The Prime Minister is expected to tell an online pledging conference - co-hosted by the UK and eight other countries and organisations - that the sooner states share their expertise the faster scientists will succeed in defeating the disease.

It comes as Mr Johnson revealed he feared he would not live to see his baby son Wilfred born when he battled Covid-19 in intensive care last month.

The PM will tell the conference, which aims to bring in more than £6.6billion in funding, that the race to develop a vaccine is 'not a competition between countries but the most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes'.

'It's humanity against the virus - we are in this together and together we will prevail,' he is expected to say.

Coronavirus has claimed more than 246,000 lives around the world, according to analysis by John Hopkins University.

A total of 28,446 people have died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Saturday. 

Meanwhile, the government is facing fresh pressure over testing, after the daily number slumped to 76,496 - below the 100,000 target. 

Cabinet minister Michael Gove told the daily Downing Street press conference last night: 'Ultimately, unless and until we have a vaccine then I suspect that we are going to have to live with some degree of constraint because of the nature of the virus.

'But we obviously want to, wherever possible, and consistent with the measures on public health, restore people's lives to as close to normal as possible.'

He said the Government will pursue a 'phased approach' to removing lockdown restrictions rather than a sudden return to 'the old normal' - and that the easing had to be done in a 'cautious fashion'.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that the two metre rule could be more flexible

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that the two metre rule could be more flexible

 

 

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2020-05-04 07:42:44Z
52780764783096

Prime Minister Boris Johnson to set out way out of coronavirus lockdown on Sunday - three days after review deadline - ITV News

Prime Minister Boris Johnson to set out way out of coronavirus lockdown on Sunday - three days after review deadline - ITV News Main page content

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2020-05-04 06:03:00Z
52780757781049

Coronavirus: Heathrow boss says social distancing in airports would mean kilometre-long boarding queues - Sky News

Social distancing at airports would mean kilometre-long queues to board each jumbo jet, Heathrow's chief executive has said.

John Holland-Kaye warned the UK's major airports do not have enough space for social distancing to be a solution to safe travel after the coronavirus lockdown ends.

"Forget social distancing, it won't work in aviation or any other form of public transport, and the problem is not the plane, it is the lack of space in the airport," he wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

"Just one jumbo jet would require a queue a kilometre long."

Heathrow
Millions of jobs need Heathrow 'up and running'

The world's largest passenger plane, the A380 - used by many of the world's airlines - seats about 500 passengers.

Instead of implementing social distancing at airports, Mr Holland-Kaye called on Boris Johnson to quickly find a "common international standard" of alternative solutions that could be ready by the summer.

:: Listen to Sophy Ridge on Sunday on Apple podcasts, Google podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

More from Covid-19

He said that should include mandatory health checks for passengers and "fantastic levels of hygiene" in airports to keep the risk of infection during journeys "very low".

Heathrow's boss, who has sacrificed his salary for three months, said aviation is the "cornerstone of the economy" and that 40% of annual exports from the UK are transported on passenger flights from Heathrow.

"If those planes aren't flying, UK factories can't get the parts they need and nor can they get their finished goods to market," he said.

He also warned thousands of jobs are at stake if airports do not open soon because "Heathrow is the biggest single-site employer in the country" and other sectors, such as tourism, rely on air travel.

As he does not believe social distancing is feasible in airports, he said the only way to begin international air travel again is to get the infection rate under control in this country and in others.

He said that could take between two and four months.

Queues at airports could be a kilometre-long if social distancing is implemented, Heathrow's boss said
Image: Queues at airports could be a kilometre long if social distancing is implemented

Mr Holland-Kaye's suggestions come days after he warned it is "just physically impossible to socially distance with any volume of passengers in an airport".

He said social distancing on planes would reduce capacities by more than half and mean "prices would shoot up".

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2020-05-04 06:29:55Z
52780763192369

Minggu, 03 Mei 2020

Coronavirus: Boris Johnson set to reveal lockdown exit plan on Sunday - Sky News

Boris Johnson is expected to outline full details of how the UK will exit lockdown on Sunday - three days after the government must review the current restrictions, Sky News has learned.

Businesses and trade unions spent the weekend in consultation with ministers, looking to establish a strategy for reopening selected areas of the economy.

Ministers have been under pressure to explain their exit strategy but have so far resisted the calls - warning that to do so risks undermining the message to stay at home to prevent the spread of the virus.

On Sunday, Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove said some social distancing measures would remain in place until a vaccine has been developed but added that the government would seek to restore people's lives to "as close to normal as possible".

Later today, the prime minister will join fellow world leaders in a virtual summit aimed at galvanising global efforts to find a vaccine for COVID-19.

Boris Johnson will urge the international community to "pull together" in what he describes as "the most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes".

The online pledging conference, which will be attended by the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Saudi Arabia, and representatives of the EU, aims to secure more than £6bn in funding to support the global response to the coronavirus pandemic.

More from Boris Johnson

Prof David Salisbury
Why a COVID-19 vaccine may not be shared

This will be used to support the development of treatments, tests and ultimately the mass production of a vaccine if one can be found.

The UK has pledged to give £388m in aid funding for research into tests, treatments and vaccines - part of a £744m commitment to help end the pandemic and support the global economy.

Mr Johnson is expected to say: "To win this battle, we must work together to build an impregnable shield around all our people and that can only be achieved by developing and mass producing a vaccine.

Professor Paul Hunter is hopeful that a vaccine for coronavirus will be found
COVID-19 vaccine 'may have to be given every two years'

"The more we pull together and share our expertise, the faster our scientists will succeed.

"The race to discover the vaccine to defeat this virus is not a competition between countries but the most urgent shared endeavour of our lifetimes.

"It's humanity against the virus - we are in this together and together we will prevail."

However, the absence of both China and the US from the virtual summit is likely to raise concerns that competition between states to secure a vaccine could hinder global efforts.

Writing in the Independent on Sunday, the leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Norway said the "global challenge" required "bringing together the world's best - and most prepared - minds to find the vaccines, treatments and therapies we need to make our world healthy again".

They also said there should be a focus on "strengthening" health systems "with particular attention to Africa".

"This is our generation's duty and we know we can make this happen", they added.

It comes as Mr Johnson has revealed that he feared he would not live to see his baby son Wilfred, who was born while he was suffering from COVID-19 in intensive care last month.

:: Listen to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

"I won't hide it from you, I was thinking about that, yes," he told The Sun.

"I owe my life to our doctors and nurses and the healthcare workers," he added. "They pulled my chestnuts out of the fire, no question."

Meanwhile, a smartphone app to trace the spread of coronavirus will be trialled on the Isle of Wight this week before being rolled out more widely later this month.

Mr Shapps told Sky News the NHSX contact tracing app requires 50-60% of people to use for it to be successful.

Burley and Hancock

A total of 28,446 people have died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Saturday.

This week Kay Burley will be hosting a live Q&A with Health Secretary Matt Hancock. You can put your questions to Mr Hancock about the coronavirus and its impact on your life live on Sky News.

Email us your questions - or you can record a video clip of your question on your phone - and send it to AskTheHealthSecretary@sky.uk

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2020-05-04 05:37:30Z
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Boris Johnson says fear of never seeing his new son gave him the will to beat coronavirus - Daily Mail

Boris Johnson says the fear of never seeing his new son gave him the will to beat coronavirus – and tells how he is 'thrilled' to be a father again

  • In an interview, Boris Johnson has opened up about his battle with coronavirus 
  • The PM admitted he thought about his unborn son as he lay in intensive care
  • He said 'we all have a lot to live for' as he spoke about experience with the virus 
  • His and fiancee Carrie Symond's son Wilfred was born on April 29 in London
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Boris Johnson has revealed that the fear of never seeing his newborn son drove him in his battle against coronavirus

The Prime Minister, 55, spent a week in April at St Thomas's Hospital in London fighting the virus, including three days in intensive care, and admitted yesterday that doctors had prepared to announce his death. 

Now, in an interview with the Sun, he has opened up further on his fight against the virus, saying he focused on 'positive thoughts' about pregnant fiancee Carrie Symonds and the impending birth of their child. 

He said: 'We've all got a lot to live for, a lot to do, and I won't hide it from you, I was thinking about that, yes.'

His son, Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson, was born last Wednesday, just over two weeks after the Prime Minister was released from hospital. 

Mr Johnson added in the interview that he was 'thrilled' with the birth and also described his hospital experience in greater detail. 

Boris Johnson (pictured arriving back at Downing Street after the birth of his son) has admitted he thought about his unborn child as he  battled coronavirus in intensive care

Boris Johnson (pictured arriving back at Downing Street after the birth of his son) has admitted he thought about his unborn child as he  battled coronavirus in intensive care

The PM said he focused on 'positive thoughts' about pregnant fiancee Carrie Symonds and the impending birth of their child (pictured is Ms Symonds with baby Wilfred)

The PM said he focused on 'positive thoughts' about pregnant fiancee Carrie Symonds and the impending birth of their child (pictured is Ms Symonds with baby Wilfred)

A heart-warming caption revealed the boy's full name as Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson, with Lawrie a reference to Ms Symond's grandfather and Nicholas a tribute to the two doctors that 'saved Boris' life'

A heart-warming caption revealed the boy's full name as Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson, with Lawrie a reference to Ms Symond's grandfather and Nicholas a tribute to the two doctors that 'saved Boris' life'

He said he jumped on his hospital bed wearing only his boxer shorts to 'clap like crazy' for the NHS – just two hours after leaving intensive care.

He added: 'It was a Thursday when I came out of ICU and with me I had a nurse called Becky and a nurse called, I think, Angel.

'I was just in my boxers, nothing else. We stood up and there was this big window looking out on the Thames and we saw the Met and the Fire Brigade do this display with their boats.

'It was just fantastic.'

He also praised the NHS staff who treated him at St Thomas' Hospital, saying they 'pulled my chestnuts out of the fire, no question'.

Speaking today, Donald Trump revealed that he and Mr Johnson had discussed the latter's battle with the virus. 

He told Fox News: 'He [Mr Johnson] was a victim (of this thing). He thought it was all over.'

Mr Johnson said he was wheeled out of intensive care around 6pm on April 9 and on to a general ward.

He said: 'It was an amazing moment. They clapped me out of the bit I was in. It's something they have done for many patients — but it is really the doctors and nurses who deserve it most.

'I was fantastically lucky. It certainly gave me a really good understanding of the disease and what goes on and how you tackle it.'

And he said he was 'so lucky by comparison' with other victims he encountered.

He said: 'I saw a lot of victims both going in and going out. 'I felt so lucky by comparison. I am lucky because so many people have suffered so much.

Carrie Symonds (pictured on March 9) revealed the name of her and Boris Johnson's newborn son as Wilfred, after the Prime Minister's grandfather

Carrie Symonds (pictured on March 9) revealed the name of her and Boris Johnson's newborn son as Wilfred, after the Prime Minister's grandfather

The couple revealed the boy's full name as Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson, with the first name a tribute to Mr Johnson's paternal grandfather, Osman Wilfred Kemal (pictured)

'I want to stress this. So many people have suffered so much more than I did.

'There are people that I know well who are still on ventilation, who are still in comas.

'There are so many who have suffered, so many families who are still facing huge anxiety, so many who have lost loved ones.

'So if you ask me, am I driven by a desire to stop other people suffering? Yes, I absolutely am.'

But he never once thought he might not pull through.

He added: 'I suppose there was some natural buoyancy or refusal to give in or harbour negative thoughts.

'I never really thought that I wouldn't come back from it. It was more frustration.

Mr Johnson praised the NHS staff who treated him at St Thomas' Hospital, saying they 'pulled my chestnuts out of the fire, no question

Mr Johnson praised the NHS staff who treated him at St Thomas' Hospital, saying they 'pulled my chestnuts out of the fire, no question

The UK has announced 315 new coronavirus deaths today, bringing total fatalities to 28,446 and putting the country on course to become the hardest hit in Europe

The UK has announced 315 new coronavirus deaths today, bringing total fatalities to 28,446 and putting the country on course to become the hardest hit in Europe

'What I can say is that I've seen the NHS save life and I've seen the NHS bring new life into the world in the last month. My love and admiration for that institution is boundless, that's all I'll say.' 

Yesterday, the PM revealed how close he had come to death in his fight against the virus. 

As his chances of survival balanced on a knife-edge, he said he was given 'litres and litres' of oxygen as medics fought to keep him alive in intensive care. 

At one point, he added, his doctors even prepared a statement in case he died. 

The PM and his partner Ms Symonds revealed their new son's full name as Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas Johnson last week, with the first name a tribute to Mr Johnson's paternal grandfather, Osman Wilfred Kemal, and Lawrie a reference to Ms Symonds' grandfather. 

In a heart-warming Instagram post, Ms Symonds' said that the middle name Nicholas was a tribute to two NHS doctors 'that saved Boris' life last month' following his battle with coronavirus.

Accompanying the caption was a photograph in which the first-time mother was seen tightly cradling her son, who sported an extraordinary full head of hair not dissimilar to that of his father.

The 32-year-old fiancee of Mr Johnson, who boasted 'my heart is full' in the caption, also revealed for the first time that Wilfred had been born at the maternity wing of the NHS's University College Hospital in central London.

The caption read: 'Introducing Wilfred Lawrie Nicholas born on 29.04.20 at 9am. Wilfred after Boris' grandfather Lawrie after my grandfather Nicholas after Dr Nick Price and Dr Nick Hart - the two doctors that saved Boris' life last month.

'Thank you so, so much to the incredible NHS maternity team at UCLH that looked after us so well. I couldn't be happier. My heart is full.'  

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2020-05-04 05:01:09Z
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