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Covid-19: One in four doctors off sick or in isolation

Dominic Cummings, the Prime Minister’s chief adviser, is the latest from Westminster to go into self-isolation after developing symptoms.

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Around one in four NHS doctors are off work sick or in isolation, the head of the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) has said, as a leading expert revealed there were signs of a slowdown in Covid-19 hospital admissions.

Professor Andrew Goddard, president of the RCP, told the PA news agency that about 25% of the doctor workforce is off, either with coronavirus or because a family member or housemate is ill.

“At the moment, we think it’s more doctors self-isolating with family members, though there are some off sick themselves,” he said.

(PA Graphics)
(PA Graphics)

“Birmingham is also struggling.”

Prof Goddard said hospital wards across England “are going from normal wards to Covid wards very quickly”.

Asked about the pressure on intensive care units, Prof Goddard told PA: “Some hospitals are really at the limit. Within London it’s very, very difficult at the moment, you can’t underestimate how difficult it is.”

He said it was unclear whether the 25% off work would be a “rolling number” or whether it could ease as testing of NHS staff increases and people come out of isolation.

“Of course the worry is we will lose more people to Covid-related illness,” he added.

It comes after the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said on Sunday that around one in five nurses had taken time off work to self-isolate.

Meanwhile, Professor Neil Ferguson, from Imperial College London and author of a report which warned of mass deaths if the UK did not introduce strict controls, said there were signs the rate of hospital admissions was slowing.

It comes as Dominic Cummings, the Prime Minister’s chief adviser, became the latest in Westminster to self-isolate after developing symptoms.

Dominic Cummings
Dominic Cummings is self-isolating (Matt Dunham/PA)

Prof Ferguson said social distancing measures brought in by the Government appeared to be having an effect on the numbers.

“In the UK we can see some early signs of slowing in some indicators – less so deaths because deaths are lagged by a long time from when measures come in force,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.

“But if we look at the numbers of new hospital admissions, that does appear to be slowing down a bit now.

“It has not yet plateaued, so still the numbers can be increasing each day but the rate of that increase has slowed.”

Prof Ferguson said the epidemic was spreading at different rates in different parts of the country, but across the UK perhaps 2% or 3% of the population had been infected.

Based on the estimated UK population of 66 million, this would mean between 1.3 and two million people have or have had the illness.

Meanwhile:

– The owner of British Airways has extended by a year a credit facility which allows it to borrow from its lenders, as easyJet grounded its entire fleet.

– The Prince of Wales, who tested positive for coronavirus last week after developing mild symptoms, is now out of self-isolation at his Birkhall home in Scotland.

– A repatriation flight from Peru has landed at Heathrow Airport.

– Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick has told officers that new powers to enforce coronavirus lockdown rules should only be used as a last resort.

Public Health England (PHE) announced that almost 11,000 coronavirus tests a day can now be carried out even though a health minister suggested just 7,000 were actually performed on Sunday.

New tests for coronavirus in UK
(PA Graphics)

The Government had set a target of carrying out 10,000 tests a day by Sunday.

Mr Hancock and Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove both declared on Sunday morning that the 10,000 figure had been reached.

But Care Minister Helen Whately told the Today programme: “The actual number that was tested on the day in question (Sunday) was I think around 7,000.

“But within the next three weeks we expect to get to 25,000 tests a day.”

The device, known as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), has been used extensively in hospitals in Italy and China to help coronavirus patients and bridges the gap between an oxygen mask and the need for full ventilation.

Downing Street said the NHS had been given the go-ahead to order as many of the machines as it needs after trials were successful.

On Sunday, England’s deputy chief medical officer, Dr Jenny Harries, said measures on social distancing in the UK could last for at least six months.

She said the nation will not be in “complete lockdown” for half a year but said measures will be lifted gradually.

(PA Graphics)
(PA Graphics)

In a video message from within his flat above Number 11 on Sunday, the PM praised 20,000 former NHS staff who have returned to the service to tackle the pandemic.

“One thing I think the coronavirus crisis has already proved is that there really is such a thing as society,” Mr Johnson added.

The NHS also announced the death of 55-year-old consultant Amged El-Hawrani at Queen’s Hospital Burton. He died on Saturday.

He joins other medics who have lost their lives, including London-based surgeon Dr Adil El Tayar, who died on Wednesday, and GP Habib Zaidi, who died in intensive care at Southend Hospital, Essex, also on Wednesday, from suspected coronavirus.

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