There have been 26,711
deaths in UK hospitals and the wider community, Prime Minister Boris Johnson
said.
Boris Johnson has said he
will set out a "comprehensive" plan next week on restarting the
economy, reopening schools and how people might travel to work.
Mr Johnson said the UK was
"past the peak" of the coronavirus outbreak and "on the downward
slope".
But he stressed the country
must not "risk a second spike" of the virus.
The prime minister said
that "we can now see the sunlight", but he insisted that to avoid the
"disaster" of a second peak the UK must meet the fifth of five tests
before the lockdown can be lifted.
"Nothing we do should
lift the R or reproduction rate - back above one," he said.
More than 81,000
coronavirus tests were carried out on Wednesday, still short of the government's
target of 100,000 by the end of April. Mr Johnson insisted: "We're
massively ramping up testing."
The reproduction rate
number is a way of rating a disease's ability to spread and is the average
number of people that one infected person will pass the virus on to.
The BBC's political editor
Laura Kuenssberg asked what level the reproduction rate should be before the
government would be "comfortable easing restrictions".
The government's chief
medical officer, Prof Chris Whitty, replied: "We are absolutely confident
that the wrong answer is anything over one."
He explained that as soon
as the R rises above one you "restart exponential growth" and
"sooner or later" the NHS would be at the risk of being overwhelmed.
Mr Johnson said that
keeping the reproduction rate down "is going to be absolutely vital to our
recovery".
Our correspondent also
asked whether the economy "just has to wait" as the government
continues with the lockdown in the UK.
The prime minister said it
was "vital" to avoid a second peak "because that would really do
economic damage".
He added: "That's why
we've got to calibrate our measures so carefully and make sure that we not only
unlock the economy gradually, but also find ways of continuing to suppress the
disease."
Mr Johnson also said face
coverings will be "useful" as part of the strategy for coming out of
lockdown "both for epidemiological reasons but also giving people
confidence they can go back to work".
No comments:
Post a Comment