UK rolls out tougher virus action after dire science warning

An arrangement of UK daily newspapers photographed as an illustration in Liverpool on March 17, 2020, shows front page headlines and a back page NHS advisory, reporting on the story that Britain is stepping up its response to coronavirus, recommending household isolation, home-working and an end to mass gatherings to try to stem an accelerating outbreak. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)

by Alice RITCHIE / Phil HAZLEWOOD / Joe JACKSON
Agence France-Presse

LondonUnited Kingdom (AFP) — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government on Tuesday unveiled a huge package of support for businesses to help them survive the introduction of tough new social measures to stem the coronavirus outbreak.

The Conservative leader said Britain needed to act “like any wartime government”, as finance minister Rishi Sunak unveiled a £330 billion ($400 billion, 363 billion euros) package of loans for virus-hit business.

Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at a news conference addressing the government’s response to the novel coronavirus COVID-19 outbreak, inside 10 Downing Street in London on March 17, 2020 – Britain on Tuesday, March 17, ramped up its response to the escalating coronavirus outbreak after the government imposed unprecedented peacetime measures prompted by scientific advice that infections and deaths would spiral without drastic action. (Photo by Matt Dunham / POOL / AFP)

Sunak said the measures were equivalent to 15 percent of GDP and were available to “any business that needs access to cash”, promising to “go further” if necessary.

He had already announced £30 billion in state aid for firms and individuals affected by the outbreak at last week’s budget.

Emergency legislation is expected to be passed through by MPs unopposed later this week in the fight against coronavirus.

Johnson’s government had on Monday ramped up the response to coronavirus, asking people to avoid unnecessary social contact, after new scientific advice that infections and deaths would spiral without drastic action.

The changes sparked warnings of massive job losses, particularly in the leisure and hospitality sectors.

Johnson said more urgent action was needed, and promised to do “whatever it takes” to tackle the global pandemic, which has infected more than 189,000 and killed over 7,800 worldwide.

“Yes, this enemy can be deadly but it is also beatable,” he told a news conference.

“We know how to beat it. We know that we will beat it.

“And however tough the months ahead, we have the resolve and the resources to win the fight.”

Death rate prediction

Firms told staff to work from home and public transport emptied on Tuesday after the government call for an end to “non-essential” social contact and unnecessary travel. For now though, schools remain open.

Confirmed UK cases have climbed to 1,950, with 69 deaths.

A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance speaking in the Health and Social Care Committee in central London on March 17, 2020, on preparations for Coronavirus. – Britain stepped up its response to coronavirus, recommending household isolation, home-working and an end to mass gatherings to try to stem an accelerating outbreak. (Photo by STRINGER / PRU / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – NO USE FOR ENTERTAINMENT, SATIRICAL, ADVERTISING PURPOSES – MANDATORY CREDIT ” AFP PHOTO / PRU “

But the government’s chief scientific adviser Patrick Vallance said it was “reasonable” to estimate that 55,000 people could have COVID-19, based on an expected death rate of one in 1,000 cases.

“If we can get numbers down to 20,000 and below, that’s a good outcome in terms of where we would hope to get with this outbreak,” he told a parliamentary health committee.

“But that’s still horrible. It’s still an enormous number of deaths and an enormous pressure on the health service.”

In new developments:

– Britons were told only to travel abroad if absolutely necessary for the next 30 days, to avoid being stranded by border closures and flight cancellations.

– The state-run National Health Service in England said all non-urgent operations would be postponed from April 15 for at least three months, in a move designed to free up 30,000 beds.

– Queen Elizabeth II moved to her Windsor Castle residence west of London a week early, and cancelled several large events.

– The Church of England’s most senior cleric, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, said public worship was “suspended until further notice”, but weddings and funerals can still be held.

– Tourist attractions, including the National Portrait Gallery in London and Tate museums and galleries, announced closures.

Johnson has faced criticism for holding off on imposing the strict measures seen elsewhere.

But he stepped up the response on Monday after scientists warned hundreds of thousands could die in Britain if there was only a focus on delaying and slowing infections.

‘Intensive intervention’

Imperial College London’s COVID-19 response team concluded in a paper that suppression was “the preferred policy option” to curb the spread of the virus.

It would require “a combination of social distancing of the entire population, home isolation of cases and household quarantine of their family members”.

A couple eat a meal at an otherwise empty restaurant at lunchtime in Covent Garden central London on March 17, 2020 after the UK government announced stringent social distancing advice including avoiding pubs and restaurants as a measure to kerb the spread of novel coronavirus COVID-19. – “Sacrificed’, in danger of ‘death’, ‘existential crisis’: British pub and restaurant chains called on the government on March 17 for help with coronavirus damage in an already faltering sector, after the Prime Minister announced stringent social distancing advice to combat the virus. The UK government recommended on Monday that “non-essential” travel should be avoided, calling in particular for pubs and restaurants to be avoided. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)

“This type of intensive intervention package… will need to be maintained until a vaccine becomes available (potentially 18 months or more),” the report stated.

They predicted transmission would “quickly rebound if interventions are relaxed”, it added.

The study’s lead author, epidemiologist Neil Ferguson, is advising the British government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, which is helping coordinate its COVID-19 response.

He said he had also shared the projections with US President Donald Trump’s administration last week and sent it an early copy of the report over the weekend.

Ferguson said the government had “no other option” but to implement new measures because modelling from new Italian data indicated 81 percent of Britons and Americans would be infected.

Some 510,000 would die in the UK and 2.2 million in the US, peaking after three months, he warned.

Mitigation policies would only halve that number and healthcare systems would still be overloaded.