Sabtu, 04 September 2021

Covid-19: Decision on jabs for children due in days - BBC News

School pupils
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The government believes there is a "strong case" for offering Covid jabs to healthy 12-15 year-olds, a source has told the BBC, as it awaits advice from the UK's chief medical officers.

Experts on Friday said they would not recommend a rollout, as the benefits on health grounds alone were "marginal".

But the chief medical officers will now consider whether giving the vaccine to younger pupils would have a wider impact on society and education.

Their decision is due within days.

Teachers' leaders say vaccinating more pupils would reduce disruption, as millions of pupils return to school for the autumn term.

Up to now the UK's four nations have followed the advice of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) on the rollout of Covid vaccinations.

Prof Anthony Harnden, deputy chairman of the JVCI told BBC Breakfast said past decisions had been "fairly clear cut" but on 12-15 year-olds it was "quite reasonable for the government to seek further advice about other aspects" and "go ahead and have a look at it from an educational point of view".

Should the jab rollout be extended, Prof Harnden said "parents need to understand what the risks are, what the benefits are and make up their own mind about whether they offer consent or not... vaccinating 12-15 year-old is not a black and white decision".

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has asked the chief medical officers to consider the rollout of the vaccine to the new age group "from a broader perspective".

This means the rate of transmission will also be a key consideration for the four chief medical officers.

BBC health correspondent Nick Triggle said: "Ministers have let it be known they are very keen on getting this age group vaccinated - both through their public pronouncements and privately behind the scenes."

In Scotland, pupils started returning to the classroom from 11 August.

However, cases doubled in a week, with the surge blamed partly on the return of schools after the holidays.

And last year, the surge that led to England's second nationwide lockdown gathered pace in September as firstly schools and secondly universities reopened.

The government has maintained throughout the pandemic that it will follow the advice of scientists.

While scientists on the JCVI make recommendations, the chief medical officers directly have the ear of ministers.

Prof Chris Whitty is England's chief medical officer, with Dr Frank Atherton, Dr Gregor Smith and Dr Michael McBride holding the roles in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland respectively.

'Broader picture'

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "If the guidance is this will reduce the disruption for all those young people, yes, we will absolutely back that.

"The government is right on this - we have to look at the broader picture… In England. specifically, where we have got so few measures now, this is going to be one of the most reassuring ways of telling those 12 to 15 year olds... that is going to minimise the disruption for you."

The JCVI said on Friday that children were at such a low risk from the virus that jabs would offer only a marginal benefit.

The group did advise widening the existing vaccine programme to include an extra 200,000 teenagers with specific underlying conditions.

Doctors identified that children with chronic heart, lung and liver conditions were at much higher risk of Covid than healthy children.

The decision not to recommend the vaccine to all healthy children was based on concern over an extremely rare side effect of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that causes heart inflammation, and can lead to palpitations and chest pain.

Data from the US, where millions of young teenagers have been vaccinated, suggests there are 60 cases of the heart condition for every million second doses given to 12 to 17-year-old boys (compared to eight in one million girls).

France, Italy, Israel and Ireland are also offering the vaccine to all children in this age group.

But as children are at such low risk from the virus, the JCVI decided that vaccination would offer only "marginal gain" and, therefore, there was "insufficient" evidence to offer mass vaccination to this age group.

The JCVI said it was difficult to factor in long Covid in its advice because of the uncertainty over how common it is in children, although it appears to be less prevalent than in adults.

Paediatricians say that healthy children with Covid end up in intensive care at a rate of two in one million, but this rises to 100 in one million for children with certain health problems.

On Friday, 42,076 cases of coronavirus were reported in the UK and 121 deaths within 28 days of a positive test.

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2021-09-04 07:20:34Z
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Jumat, 03 September 2021

COVID-19: Ministers could overrule JCVI and push ahead with vaccines for those aged between 12 and 15 - Sky News

The government is reportedly determined to push ahead with COVID-19 vaccines for 12 to 15-year-olds, despite advisers recommending against it.

The Joint Committee for Vaccination and Immunisation said on Friday that, while it would widen the vaccination programme to include more children in that age group with health conditions, it was not recommending the widespread vaccination of their healthy classmates.

But reports in a number of national newspapers on Saturday said that government ministers, who will have the final say, are keen to offer vaccinations to all children in that age group.

They will draw on the advice of the chief medical officers for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland before "making a decision shortly", Health Secretary Sajid Javid said.

The Times reported that the vaccinations could begin as soon as next week.

Earlier on Friday, the JCVI had said that the coronavirus presents only a small risk to healthy children and, therefore, the benefit of being vaccinated was not great enough to support mass vaccination for this age group.

The independent medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, has approved the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for those aged 12 and over.

More on Covid-19

Efforts are already under way to recruit thousands of vaccinators for schools, and Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has previously said he "very much hopes" the under-16s could be vaccinated.

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COVID-19 and kids: Should we be worried?

Professor Wei Shen Lim, chair of COVID-19 immunisation for the JCVI, said: "The JCVI's view is that overall, the health benefits from COVID-19 vaccination to healthy children aged 12 to 15 years are marginally greater than the potential harms.

"Taking a precautionary approach, this margin of benefit is considered too small to support universal COVID-19 vaccination for this age group at this time. The committee will continue to review safety data as they emerge."

Northern Ireland Health Minister Robin Swann said he agrees the issue of a wider rollout "warrants further consideration".

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Wales's Health Minister Eluned Morgan said she had asked the country's chief medical officer to "provide guidance at the earliest opportunity on the clinical and wider health benefits of vaccinating this age group".

Scotland's Health Minister Humza Yousaf said he had asked for the review to be conducted "as soon as possible".

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said he is disappointed by the JCVI decision not to recommend jabs for all 12 to 15-year-olds.

He added that while they respect it, it could mean it is "more difficult during the autumn term and beyond to guard against educational disruption caused by transmission of the virus".

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2021-09-04 02:35:38Z
52781854229097

Neo-Nazi teen who tried to kill Asian friend with 3D gun found guilty - Metro.co.uk

Teen neo-Nazi likened his teenage friend, who is Asian, to a 'cockroach'
Teen neo-Nazi likened his teenage friend, who is Asian, to a ‘cockroach’ (Picture: Counter Terrorism Policing North East/ Getty Images)

A teenage ‘boss’ of a neo-Nazi cell who plotted to kill his Asian friend has been convicted of terror offences.

Matthew Cronjager, 18, worked towards obtaining 3D printed guns or a sawn-off shotgun as he wanted to shoot the man who boasted about sleeping with ‘white chicks’.

Alongside plotting to murder his teenage target who he likened to a ‘cockroach’, the defendant had also set himself up as the leader of a network of right-wing extremists.

The Old Bailey heard that he also set up an online library to share right-wing propaganda and explosives-making manuals with like-minded people he had met on the dark web.

But to Cronjager’s surprise, he was sharing his plans with an undercover police officer who had infiltrated a Telegram group called The British Hand.

Cronjager, of Ingatestone in Essex, who is on the autistic spectrum, denied he ever meant to do anything.

Cronjager, 18, tried to get hold of a 3D printed gun or a sawn-off shotgun (Picture: Counter Terrorism Policing North)
Cronjager, 18, tried to get hold of a 3D printed gun or a sawn-off shotgun (Picture: Counter Terrorism Policing North)

According to evidence heard in court, he told an undercover police officer: ‘I know it’s an overall target and he’s a sand n***** that f***** a white girl. In fact I think three of them. They’re like cockroaches,” the court heard.

‘Do you know what’s weird. I was friends with him for ages and I can just kill him like that. I have no hang ups about doing it. He crossed the line.’

The police officer asked whether the girls had been raped and Cronjager is accused of saying: ‘Nope, but it’s a violation of nature.

‘We’re not supposed to mix race … It’s not rape by legal definition but it’s kind of like rape if that makes sense. Violation at least.’

The teenager ‘renounced’ his extremist views in court, saying they were born out of loneliness and misery.

Cronjager previously pleaded guilty to four offences of possessing information useful to a terrorist.

He was remanded in custody to be sentenced in October.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2021-09-03 21:58:00Z
52781858251345

Boris Johnson to break triple lock pension pledge for overhaul of social care - The Times

Boris Johnson is expected to break two manifesto commitments on the same day next week by increasing national insurance to fund health and social care and limiting a rise in the state pension.

The prime minister is facing criticism from cabinet ministers and Tory MPs for his plans to increase national insurance by a percentage point, raising £13 billion to overhaul social care and address NHS waiting lists.

One cabinet minister has compared the triumvirate of Johnson, Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, and Sajid Javid, the health secretary, who are making the decision, to a “cabal”.

The three men are working out the final details this weekend, with Johnson favouring a cap on individual care costs of £50,000 while Sunak wants a less generous £86,000.

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2021-09-03 23:01:00Z
52781857661072

Man arrested after 'suspicious' death of woman who fell from Arthur's Seat - Sky News

A 27-year-old man has been arrested after a woman fell to her death from Arthur's Seat in Edinburgh.

Police Scotland said they received a report that a woman had fallen from the hill at about 9pm on Thursday.

Emergency services, including fire and ambulance crews, arrived at the scene and the 31-year-old died a short time later.

Officers said her death is being treated as suspicious.

Arthur's Seat is an ancient volcano, and sits 251m above sea level.

It is also the site of a large and well-preserved fort.

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2021-09-03 19:29:38Z
52781857715108

Tragic final weeks of 'Maggie millions' who died ALONE in her bungalow - Daily Mail

Tragic final weeks of 'Maggie millions' who died ALONE in her bungalow: £27m EuroMillions winner moved out of her dream home and back into £125k bungalow after cutting herself off from family and refusing to seek help for 'serious illness'

  • EXCLUSIVE: Margaret Loughery's brother Paul spoke of his sister's last weeks
  • He says he is awaiting to hear the cause of death but insists it was not suicide
  • Paul told how her life had been blighted by mental illness leaving her vulnerable

EuroMillions lottery winner Margaret Loughrey died alone in her bungalow after refusing to seek medical help for a serious illness over the last two weeks, her brother revealed today.

Paul Loughrey said he was awaiting to hear the cause of death of his kind-hearted sister, who won nearly £27million in November 2013, but he insisted that she had not taken her own life.

He told how her life had been blighted by mental illness, leaving her potentially vulnerable to people taking advantage of her.

Paul also disclosed that she had largely cut herself off from her family for the last six years after giving £1million each to her four brothers and her sister.

Margaret Loughrey (pictured), 56, scooped the EuroMillions top prize eight years ago but famously said it had 'destroyed her'

Margaret Loughrey (pictured), 56, scooped the EuroMillions top prize eight years ago but famously said it had 'destroyed her' 

She recently had a Grand Designs-style dream home worth around £1million, built next door to her bungalow, complete with a glass-fronted showroom for her collection of classic cars.

But after moving into the house — built in the style of a Victorian warehouse with a curved metal roof — she decided it was too big for her and returned to her bungalow next door.

She spent her last days locked away with her two beloved black Scottish Terrier dogs before she was found dead on Thursday at her modest, but immaculately maintained home in Strabane, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.

In an exclusive interview with MailOnline, Paul revealed that his sister had struggled to cope with her massive win and had ‘never managed to find happiness’.

Margaret Loughrey had given relatives £1million each and just completed building her dream home (pictured) when she was found dead

Margaret Loughrey had given relatives £1million each and just completed building her dream home (pictured) when she was found dead

Photographs show the brand-new conversion overlooking surrounding bungalows, including the one Ms Loughrey lived in (pictured), on the border town

Photographs show the brand-new conversion overlooking surrounding bungalows, including the one Ms Loughrey lived in (pictured), on the border town

He said: ‘The lottery win done none of us any good, let me tell you. The day that she won it, I said, “Life is never going to be the same, this is going to destroy some of us here”.

‘It was too much for Margaret to deal with. It was a lot of money. I couldn’t have dealt with it. Personally I wouldn’t have wanted it.

‘We don’t know what the cause of death is yet, but she didn’t take her own life. We definitely know that.

‘She was very sick for a couple of weeks, but she refused to go to the doctor and refused to go to the hospital. She was very frail.

When she won the lottery she had been at the Job Centre living on benefits of just £58-a-week and got ticket on a whim

When she won the lottery she had been at the Job Centre living on benefits of just £58-a-week and got ticket on a whim

‘Margaret was always like a knitting needle. Even when she was a wain (a child), she was always light framed.

‘She didn’t leave home much because she wasn’t well. It’s just so sad.’

Paul disclosed that his sister had drawn up detailed plans with her solicitor for her own funeral which would not involve any form of religious service.

He said that she had made a ‘beautiful’ last wish to be cremated and have her ashes turned into a ‘pebble’ to be scattered on idyllic Marble Hill beach in County Donegal in the Republic of Ireland where she spent happy childhood holidays.

Speaking from his home in Strabane, Paul added: ‘Everything is with her solicitor, even the arrangements for her funeral. The family is not organising anything.

‘I don’t think there is even going to be a proper funeral. She didn’t want one. She just wanted to be cremated with no fuss.

‘Her family will be there, but that’s it. She wasn't religious at all, so there will be no religious service.

‘I think it is beautiful what she is doing. She is going to be cremated on Monday or Tuesday and she wants her ashes turned into a pebble, like a stone.

‘This pebble is to be left on Marble Hill beach because Margaret was always so happy when she was there with our Dad.

After the windfall, Ms Loughrey was dubbed 'Maggie Millions' and bought a property empire including a £125,000 bungalow (pictured), a pub and a former mill turned leisure centre

After the windfall, Ms Loughrey was dubbed 'Maggie Millions' and bought a property empire including a £125,000 bungalow (pictured), a pub and a former mill turned leisure centre

‘When we were children, my mother and father took us there a lot. I think it was when Margaret was always at her happiest.’

Relatives and friends of Ms Loughlan are having to find a new home for her Scottish terriers which are still at her home.

A family member was seen arriving care for the dogs this morning as they ran around the back garden.

Paul said: ‘Her dogs are beautiful. They were crying away yesterday. I think they can sense that something has happened. They need to be taken away.’

Lottery win was celebrated by locals

Shop assistant, Nadine O'Kane, handed Ms Loughrey the slip with the numbers 19, 23, 27, 42 and 44 with Lucky Stars 3 and 5.

Miss O'Kane told the Irish Daily Mailin 2013: 'Its nice to see it happen to her. I didn't know her.

'I only found out on Sunday after I was told to come into work to get my picture taken.'

Local SuperValu store manager Colm Gallagher also said at the time: 'I don't know what Margaret's going to do with the money but I wish her all the best with it.'

He told how his sister had built her dream home on a vacant plot containing outbuildings next to her bungalow.

The house behind a high wall and imposing gates stood empty today, with her modern black Jaguar parked in the drive.

Her glass fronted garage still contained several classic vehicles including a VW Beetle, a yellow Mini, a VW camper van and Land Rover, and a white-painted vintage motorcycle.

Paul said: ‘She moved in for a wee while, but left and went back to the bungalow again. It was just too big for her I think. She was on her own so moving to the big house was not a good idea.

‘It’s a bit sad. Nobody knows what she was going to do with the big house, but she did keep a few classic cars there. God knows what will happen to all that now. To be honest, I don’t really care what happens to it.’

Ms Loughrey was unemployed and living on benefits when she bought her winning EuroMillions ticket in November 2013 on her way home from getting an application form for a job with a charity

She scooped her jackpot of £26,863,588 after she correctly marked five numbers and two lucky stars.

Ms Loughrey vowed to continue living in her hometown of Strabane, and insisted that her money was ‘going to be spread around’ to help others.

She was true to her word and bought her bungalow worth around £125,000, and gifted money to her family and local good causes.

Ms Loughrey also ended up buying the derelict Herdmans former linen mill near her home, and had high hopes of renovating the site, but her plans never materialised.

She was briefly sectioned four months after her win, but she insisted in an interview with a local newspaper that she was not mentally ill.

Ms Loughrey spent a reported three weeks in a mental health unit before being allowed home after engaging solicitors to appeal against the decision to detain her. 

She claimed in an interview in 2019 that people had ‘stolen millions’ from her, and that her lottery win had ‘sent her to hell and back’.

She added: ‘Money has brought me nothing but grief. It has destroyed my life.

‘I have had six years of this. I don’t believe in religion, but if there is a hell, I have been in it. It has been that bad. I went down to five-and-a-half stone.’

Speaking of his love for his sister, Paul added: ‘We all tried to help Margaret over the years, but she just didn’t want to know, that’s the bottom line

‘She had a mental illness. She was sectioned for a time and they should have kept her inside.

‘They wanted to keep her in for six months which would have really helped her, but Margaret got a solicitor on her case to be allowed out, and the next day she was out. 

The lottery winner had stayed living in her £125,000 bungalow, despite her fortune

The lottery winner had stayed living in her £125,000 bungalow, despite her fortune

Paul Gallagher, a neighbour and local councillor, told the Belfast Telegraph Ms Loughrey had just transformed a derelict house nicknamed 'the barn' into her dream home with a 'round tin roof' (pictured left next door to her bungalow)

Paul Gallagher, a neighbour and local councillor, told the Belfast Telegraph Ms Loughrey had just transformed a derelict house nicknamed 'the barn' into her dream home with a 'round tin roof' (pictured left next door to her bungalow)

‘I felt it was a disgrace. It was just because she had money.

‘She has had a sad life. I don’t think she ever really got over her father’s death when she was only 15 or 16. She should have been counselled. If it happened today, she would have been.

‘Margaret hasn’t spoken to me in six years. She gave us all a few pounds and she made sure we were comfortable for the rest of our days, but she cut all ties with us.

‘Before she won, I would visit her every morning, but once she won, she didn’t want to see any of us. It was her mental health that was the problem. I didn’t take it personally. It was an illness she had.’

Asked about claims that she had money stolen, Paul said: ‘I heard that, but I don’t know anything about it. There is a lot of rumours.

Ms Loughrey landed the huge win after matching five numbers and two lucky stars but had years of troubles. Pictured outside court after being convicted of assaulting a taxi driver

Ms Loughrey landed the huge win after matching five numbers and two lucky stars but had years of troubles. Pictured outside court after being convicted of assaulting a taxi driver

‘I did hear that some people wrote a cheque and cashed it, and Margaret didn’t OK it. She didn’t know about it, and they took the money.

‘Margaret never told me personally about it, so it might have been a rumour and not true.

‘It’s just sad. It should have made everybody happy, having no money worries, but it made Margaret worse to be honest.

‘People would try and take advantage of her, but Margaret was very intelligent, You would get nothing by her. She was nobody’s fool.

‘She was very generous. I heard that she paid for things like somebody’s wedding and even somebody’s funeral because she knew the family did not have much.

‘I think she also helped a few wains that were sick. She was generous. She wasn’t a miser. I know that she helped charities as well, but I don’t know which ones.

‘She tried to help people and also to create jobs. She wanted to do good with her money.’

Paul said he had faced the ordeal of having to tell his 83-year-old mother of Ms Loughrey’s death.

He said: ‘My mum has got dementia and is in a care home and it was tough telling her there. Then I had to tell her again after she forgot, so she is reliving it. She brought up us up on her own after Dad died.’

A Police Service Northern Ireland spokesman said: 'Police received a report of the sudden death of a woman at the Ballycolman Lane area of Strabane on Thursday September 2.

'A post-mortem is due to take place but at this stage, the death is not being treated as suspicious.'

The Northern Ireland Ambulance Service confirmed they also attended the house on Thursday morning.

A NIAS spokesman said: 'We were called to an emergency in the Ballycolman area of Strabane at 10.30am this morning. No patients were taken from the scene.'

From blowouts to benefits: Three British teenagers who won millions of pounds on the lottery then blew it

Callie Rogers

Callie Rogers is pictured after her £1.87million lottery win in 2013

Callie Rogers is pictured after her £1.87million lottery win in 2013

Callie Rogers was just 16 when she won a £1.87million lottery jackpot while working as a shop assistant on £3.60 an hour in 2003.

But the mother-of-four from Flimby in Cumbria has suffered a spectacular fall from grace since and is now on benefits after blowing the whole amount.

Miss Rogers spent thousands on wild parties, three breast enhancements and designer clothing, while also giving away large amounts to her family and friends.

But she was also targeted by people who took cash off her, suffered a string of failed relationships and was attacked by two women on a night out.

Then in March it emerged Miss Rogers had been pepper-sprayed by police following a car crash when her 4x4 veered off the road late at night.

She then failed a drugs test and was given a 22-month driving ban following the incident near her boyfriend Jason Fearon's home in Crosby, Merseyside.

Callie Rogers, pictured in recent years
Callie Rogers has suffered a fall from grace since her win

Callie Rogers, pictured in recent years, has suffered a fall from grace since her win and is now on benefits after blowing her winnings

Jane Park

Jane Park was 17 when she won big on the Euromillions in 2013

Jane Park was 17 when she won big on the Euromillions in 2013

Jane Park was just 17 when she won £1million after getting lucky with her first-ever Euromillions ticket in 2013.

She has repeatedly stated winning the Euromillions prize ruined her life and even threatened to sue lottery operators Camelot for negligence, claiming someone her age shouldn't have been allowed to win.

She has confessed that it was only the advice of family members which stopped her going bust after she went on a spending spree.

The jackpot winner paid for a breast enlargement, Brazilian bottom lift and splashed out on a string of luxury holidays and fashion accessories.

In 2019, she revealed she was making money by selling racy topless pictures of herself on subscription site OnlyFans.

In January she said she had moved to Dubai for 'business' reasons and this would be a permanent move, but she returned to Scotland in April. 

Also this year, she has had a second Brazilian bottom lift in Turkey after her original surgery in 2017 was botched and left her in hospital with suspected sepsis. 

Jane Park pictured in more recent years
Jane Park has sold topless pictures of herself

Jane Park pictured in more recent years. In 2019, she revealed she was making money by selling racy topless pictures on OnlyFans

Michael Carroll

Michael Carroll scooped the jackpot in 2002 from a £1 ticket

Michael Carroll scooped the jackpot in 2002 from a £1 ticket

'Lotto lout' Michael Carroll blew his £9.7million jackpot on drink, drugs and brothels in a decade – describing it as 'the best ten years of my life for a pound'.

But he now works seven days a week as a £10-an-hour coalman in Moray, Scotland, after having to start again.

Mr Carroll bought the £1 ticket when he was aged 19 and was working as a binman in Norfolk, but before long he was doing cocaine and drinking huge amounts of vodka before he had even got out of bed.

He gave £4million to friends and family, including his aunt and uncle who raised him following his father's death when he was aged only 10, but spent the rest on an extreme lifestyle, including three homes and racing cars.

His marriage to wife Sandra Aitken ended after she accused him of sleeping with vice girls – and Mr Carroll has claimed to have bedded some 4,000 women.

He appeared in court more than 30 times, but was handed an ASBO for terrorising his neighbours and jailed for five months in 2004 after failing to comply with a drug treatment order imposed as part of a sentence for cocaine possession.

His accountant warned him in 2005 that he was down to his last million, and in February 2006 he was jailed for nine months for affray.

By 2013, he was declared bankrupt and found himself back on Jobseeker's Allowance – and he even moved into a hotel for homeless people for three months.

He then worked at the Walkers biscuit factory in Aberlour, before getting a licence to work in an abattoir, but now works as a coal miner and lives in a modest rented flat.

Speaking to the Mirror in 2019, he said: 'I don't look back with any regrets, that's for sure. It was ten years of fun for a pound, you can't go wrong with that.

'I wouldn't want to turn the clock back. But I live a good, free lifestyle now and I'm happier because I've got my life back.'

Carroll previously described how he was a 'full-blown alcoholic' and drank two bottles of vodka a day

Carroll previously described how he was a 'full-blown alcoholic' and drank two bottles of vodka a day

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiZmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTk1NTUwOS9UcmFnaWMtZmluYWwtd2Vla3MtTWFnZ2llLW1pbGxpb25zLWRpZWQtYnVuZ2Fsb3cuaHRtbNIBamh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTk1NTUwOS9hbXAvVHJhZ2ljLWZpbmFsLXdlZWtzLU1hZ2dpZS1taWxsaW9ucy1kaWVkLWJ1bmdhbG93Lmh0bWw?oc=5

2021-09-03 15:49:49Z
52781855820393

COVID-19: UK records 121 more coronavirus-related deaths and 42,076 new cases - Sky News

The UK has reported 121 more coronavirus-related deaths and 42,076 cases in the latest 24-hour period, according to government data.

It compares with 178 deaths and 38,154 infections yesterday, while last Friday 100 fatalities and 38,046 cases were announced.

Today's cases figure is the highest since 21 July, when there were 44,104 reported.

Live - Latest coronavirus updates from the UK and around the world

The latest seven-day average for deaths is 114, far below the peak of the second wave in January when it reached more than 1,200.

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Since the pandemic began, total deaths in the UK within 28 days of a positive test stand at 133,041.

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An alternative count - recording deaths with COVID-19 mentioned anywhere on the death certificate - is 156,119.

Meanwhile, another 40,002 people had a first dose of a vaccine on Thursday, taking the total to 48,171,998 (88.6% of over-16s).

There were 119,375 second jabs, meaning 43,142,747 are fully inoculated (79.4% of over-16s).

It comes as the UK's vaccine advisory body said healthy children between 12 and 15 should not get a vaccine. However, the UK's four chief medical officers are to review the matter before a final decision.

Daily figures also show the number of people in hospital with coronavirus is 7,541 (1,038 of those on mechanical ventilation).

It's a significant rise from the middle of June, when it was around 1,200, and cases began to rise. However, once again, it's well down on the 38,000 or so in hospital towards the end of January.

Today's figures come as England's R number range was estimated to have fallen from 1.0-1.1 to 0.9 and 1.1.

It indicates the average number of people each COVID-positive person goes on to infect.

An R number between 0.9 and 1.1 means every 10 infected people will, on average, pass the virus on to between nine and 11 other people.

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2021-09-03 15:18:01Z
CBMigwFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9jb3ZpZC0xOS11ay1yZWNvcmRzLTEyMS1tb3JlLWNvcm9uYXZpcnVzLXJlbGF0ZWQtZGVhdGhzLWFuZC00Mi0wNzYtbmV3LWNhc2VzLWRhaWx5LWZpZ3VyZXMtc2hvdy0xMjM5ODQ3MtIBhwFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvY292aWQtMTktdWstcmVjb3Jkcy0xMjEtbW9yZS1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1yZWxhdGVkLWRlYXRocy1hbmQtNDItMDc2LW5ldy1jYXNlcy1kYWlseS1maWd1cmVzLXNob3ctMTIzOTg0NzI