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UK coronavirus live: excess deaths reached almost 55,000 in early May, says ONS | UK coronavirus live: excess deaths reached almost 55,000 in early May, says ONS |
(32 minutes later) | |
Overall deaths in England and Wales in week up to 8 May were down for the third week in a row, at 12,657 | Overall deaths in England and Wales in week up to 8 May were down for the third week in a row, at 12,657 |
And the health department in Northern Ireland has recorded a further seven deaths, taking the total to 489. The details are here. | |
Public Health Wales has recorded a further 17 deaths, taking the total to 1,224. | |
Over 2m households have applied for universal credit, the UK’s main social security benefit, since the coronavirus lock down started to hit the economy in mid-March, latest figures from the Department for Work and Pensions show. | |
Between 16 March, when social distancing guidance came into effect, and 12 May there were 2,042,560 “declarations” – where people signed up for universal credit help because they had lost their job or had taken a big cut in pay. | |
Since 23 March, when lockdown was formally announced, there have been 1,771,910 household applications. Not all will be followed through or successful – either because claimants move back into work, or they are ineligible because they have more than £16,000 in savings. | |
Universal credit applications reached a daily peak on 27 March of 103,310. Although volumes have now dipped – there were 23,680 on 12 May – they remain significantly higher than pre-crisis levels. On 1 March there were just 4,090 applications. | |
The government heralded the record figures as proof that the digital universal credit system was holding up under pressure. | |
However, the DWP has come under under fire over reports that some new claimants are worse off after applying for universal credit, because the application automatically triggers the cancellation of existing in-work benefits. | |
When some claimants realised they were ineligible for universal credit because their savings levels were too high, they found that DWP rules prevented their tax credit award being reinstated, leaving them hundreds of pounds out of pocket, the BBC reported. | |
A child of seven was among 174 new Covid-19 deaths, NHS England has said. | |
The new fatalities bring the number of people who have died in hospitals in England after testing positive for coronavirus to 24,913. The full details are here (pdf). | |
NHS England said six patients – aged 45 to 90 – of the 174 who died had no known underlying health conditions, suggesting the seven-year-old who died had some form of existing medical issue. | |
Yesterday, the Department of Health and Social Care released figures saying the UK’s Covid-19 death toll, including fatalities in the community, was 34,796. | |
Children as young as 11 could be recruited in “large numbers” by county lines drugs gangs if secondary schools do not fully reopen until September, a police and crime commissioner has said. | |
The West Midlands’ Labour commissioner David Jamieson, who is also a former teacher, said children aged 11-14 could be “swept up” by criminals because they were not in lessons during the Covid-19 lockdown. | |
It comes as the government has announced it wants some primary school pupils to be back in lessons “at the earliest” by 1 June, and “face-to-face support” for older secondary pupils with upcoming exams. But local authorities have instructed schools not to reopen because of safety concerns. | |
Jamieson, speaking at the region’s strategic policing and crime board, said he was also concerned about boys who may find themselves out of work after furlough ends, falling into crime. Commenting on the reopening of some schools in England from June, he said: | |
And here are two of the main lines from the Downing Street lobby briefing. | And here are two of the main lines from the Downing Street lobby briefing. |
The prime minister’s spokesman rejected claims that care homes were forced to take coronavirus patients without proper support. The spokesman said: | The prime minister’s spokesman rejected claims that care homes were forced to take coronavirus patients without proper support. The spokesman said: |
The allegation that care homes were forced to take patients with coronavirus being discharged from hospital, who then spread the infection, has been made repeatedly. Two articles have put the case particularly powerful. In this one (paywall) in the Sunday Times this weekend an anonymous care home boss said: | The allegation that care homes were forced to take patients with coronavirus being discharged from hospital, who then spread the infection, has been made repeatedly. Two articles have put the case particularly powerful. In this one (paywall) in the Sunday Times this weekend an anonymous care home boss said: |
And in this Telegraph column (paywall) cited by Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs last week Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote: | And in this Telegraph column (paywall) cited by Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs last week Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote: |
The spokesman confirmed that ministers are ultimately responsible for government decisions. This was promoted by a question about Thérèse Coffey’s comment this morning suggesting scientists were to blame for bad government decisions. (See 9.32am.) The spokesman said: | The spokesman confirmed that ministers are ultimately responsible for government decisions. This was promoted by a question about Thérèse Coffey’s comment this morning suggesting scientists were to blame for bad government decisions. (See 9.32am.) The spokesman said: |
This will be seen as an attempt to persuade government scientists that they are not being lined as the scapegoats for the widely-anticipated inquiry into the UK’s handling of this crisis. Whether the scientists will feel reassured or not is another matter. | This will be seen as an attempt to persuade government scientists that they are not being lined as the scapegoats for the widely-anticipated inquiry into the UK’s handling of this crisis. Whether the scientists will feel reassured or not is another matter. |
Access to places of worship will have to be “supervised” when they reopen as the country eases out of the Covid-19 lockdown, according to the head of the Catholic church in England and Wales. | Access to places of worship will have to be “supervised” when they reopen as the country eases out of the Covid-19 lockdown, according to the head of the Catholic church in England and Wales. |
Speaking on a Zoom panel about the safe reopening of places of worship, Cardinal Vincent Nichols suggested different sections of churches could be closed off each day to allow cleaning to take place. Acknowledging that supervision will be required, he explained that “it’s not as if the church doors will be flung open and say: ‘come in when you want.’” | Speaking on a Zoom panel about the safe reopening of places of worship, Cardinal Vincent Nichols suggested different sections of churches could be closed off each day to allow cleaning to take place. Acknowledging that supervision will be required, he explained that “it’s not as if the church doors will be flung open and say: ‘come in when you want.’” |
Places of worship come under step three of the government’s recovery strategy, meaning they cannot open until 4 July at the earliest. | Places of worship come under step three of the government’s recovery strategy, meaning they cannot open until 4 July at the earliest. |
Nichols, the archbishop of Westminster, said: “I think one thing is very clear, access to a church in the foreseeable future will be supervised, so it’s not as if the church doors will be flung open and say: come in when you want. There will have to be people there, the whole process will have to be supervised.” | Nichols, the archbishop of Westminster, said: “I think one thing is very clear, access to a church in the foreseeable future will be supervised, so it’s not as if the church doors will be flung open and say: come in when you want. There will have to be people there, the whole process will have to be supervised.” |
He added: “Each day a different section of the church might be made available, it doesn’t have to be the whole church, the whole time. | He added: “Each day a different section of the church might be made available, it doesn’t have to be the whole church, the whole time. |
“So you could have the right hand back part for one day, and then the next day it will be the next session, so that would enable a cleaning routine to be more feasible, and it would leave parts of the church unused for maybe three days, which would help in terms of the hygiene.” | “So you could have the right hand back part for one day, and then the next day it will be the next session, so that would enable a cleaning routine to be more feasible, and it would leave parts of the church unused for maybe three days, which would help in terms of the hygiene.” |
Nichols said last week that Catholic churches should be allowed to reopen before Pentecostal churches, or mosques owing to their different styles of worship. | Nichols said last week that Catholic churches should be allowed to reopen before Pentecostal churches, or mosques owing to their different styles of worship. |
At at Commons committee this morning Ros Pritchard, the director general of the British Holiday and Home Park Association, said “vigilante” members of the public had been reporting people staying in holiday homes - not knowing they were key workers, not holidaymakers. | At at Commons committee this morning Ros Pritchard, the director general of the British Holiday and Home Park Association, said “vigilante” members of the public had been reporting people staying in holiday homes - not knowing they were key workers, not holidaymakers. |
Asked about a nervousness among communities at the prospect of visitors, she said: | Asked about a nervousness among communities at the prospect of visitors, she said: |
Pritchard also said that seasonal tourism businesses were effectively looking at “three winters in a row” and that, while businesses were “hanging in there”, some could start “going to the wall” in October without ongoing support. | Pritchard also said that seasonal tourism businesses were effectively looking at “three winters in a row” and that, while businesses were “hanging in there”, some could start “going to the wall” in October without ongoing support. |
At the Lords science committee this morning (see 12.19pm) Prof John Edmunds, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a member of the governments’ Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, said the study of other coronaviruses suggested “potentially bad news” for hopes that humans could develop a long-term immunity from Covid-19. He explained: | At the Lords science committee this morning (see 12.19pm) Prof John Edmunds, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a member of the governments’ Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, said the study of other coronaviruses suggested “potentially bad news” for hopes that humans could develop a long-term immunity from Covid-19. He explained: |
Here are some of the main points from Nicola Sturgeon’s press conference in Edinburgh. | Here are some of the main points from Nicola Sturgeon’s press conference in Edinburgh. |
Sturgeon rejected suggestions that the Scottish government was engaged in a cover-up when it failed to notify people who might have been infected with coronavirus at the Nike conference in Edinburgh in February. At least 25 people at the conference contracted coronavirus, but people who may have been in contact with them at the venue were not told. Sturgeon said that an incident management team was in charge, and that it acted independently. She said other people were not alerted out of concerns for patient confidentiality. She said that to have publicised the incident at that stage could have led to individuals being identified. This was not a “deliberate attempt to cover up”, she said. She said she could understand why people thought that had been the wrong decision. But she would not go as far as saying herself that it had been the wrong decision given the circumstances at the time. | Sturgeon rejected suggestions that the Scottish government was engaged in a cover-up when it failed to notify people who might have been infected with coronavirus at the Nike conference in Edinburgh in February. At least 25 people at the conference contracted coronavirus, but people who may have been in contact with them at the venue were not told. Sturgeon said that an incident management team was in charge, and that it acted independently. She said other people were not alerted out of concerns for patient confidentiality. She said that to have publicised the incident at that stage could have led to individuals being identified. This was not a “deliberate attempt to cover up”, she said. She said she could understand why people thought that had been the wrong decision. But she would not go as far as saying herself that it had been the wrong decision given the circumstances at the time. |
Dr Gregor Smith, the interim chief medical officer for Scotland, said he was not aware of any active cases in Scotland of children having a serious condition like Kawasaki disease, that may be related to coronavirus. | Dr Gregor Smith, the interim chief medical officer for Scotland, said he was not aware of any active cases in Scotland of children having a serious condition like Kawasaki disease, that may be related to coronavirus. |
Sturgeon insisted that there had been “good cooperation between the different nations of the UK” in handling coronavirus. | Sturgeon insisted that there had been “good cooperation between the different nations of the UK” in handling coronavirus. |
She defended the decision to discharge patients into Scottish care homes when there was not a proper testing regime in place. She said at the time it was vital to free up hospital capacity. | She defended the decision to discharge patients into Scottish care homes when there was not a proper testing regime in place. She said at the time it was vital to free up hospital capacity. |