Scientists Advising UK Government Say Evolving Covid Could Lead To Resurgence Of Virus In The Summer

Scientists Advising UK Government Say Evolving Covid Could Lead To Resurgence Of Virus In The Summer

By Ben Kerrigan-

It remains “highly likely” there will be a further resurgence in hospital admissions and deaths “at some point”, and that the full impact of easing restriction will not be seen until mid-June at the earliest, scientists from the Scientific Advisory Group (Sage)  have said.

No sooner than Boris Johnson was spreading good news through the media of permitted hugs, masks off in classrooms and potential 1m social distance removed from next month, the doom sayers are already out warning  us not to het our hopes too high.

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Although Covid-19 infections will increase across the country following lockdown easing, it is “highly unlikely to put unsustainable pressure” on the NHS, the group concluded at its meeting on May 5.

That’s in the short run, not necessarily the long run, when we may get chased back into our homes unless Boris Johnson’s advice to mix freely from next month is ignored, and we continue social distancing.

The resurgence of the virus will be smaller if measures that reduce transmission, such as social distancing, are maintained beyond the end of the Government’s road map on June 21, the scientists said.

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“If baseline policies to reduce transmission are kept in place at the end of the road map, behaviour does not return to pre-pandemic levels, and vaccine rollout is not substantially slowed, there is an opportunity to keep the resurgence small,” Sage said.

Modelling has also shown lower peaks for hospital admissions and deaths, compared to previous waves, as evidence suggested that the vaccine may have a greater impact on transmission than previously thought.

Sage said that aside from new variants, a low vaccine rollout amongst younger adults and high levels of contact at an early stage were the two “biggest risks” in terms of seeing a larger resurgence of the virus.

It warned that the virus that causes Covid-19 was evolving and it was likely that existing vaccines may fail to protect against transmission, infection and disease in the future.

“Updating the vaccine to keep pace with viral evolution or searching for more broadly protective vaccines are potential solutions to this,” Sage said.

Meanwhile, the emergence of a highly transmissible variant, or one that “evades immunity” could lead to a “very significant” wave of infection, potentially larger than that seen in January this year, if measures are not put in place to control it, the group said.

“Maintaining control of transmission of any such variants will be more difficult when there are fewer measures in place,” Sage added.

It said resources should be targeted towards the early detection of new variant clusters, and ensure that strong measures are put in place over a wide geographical area when one is discovered

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