coronavirus

1 in 30 Londoners Has Covid as City Mayor Declares a Major Incident

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  • "The threat this virus poses to our city is at crisis point," London Mayor Sadiq Khan said via Twitter.
  • "One in 30 Londoners now has COVID-19. If we do not take immediate action now, our NHS could be overwhelmed and more people will die," he added.
  • The announcement comes shortly after weekly data through to Jan. 2 found London's coronavirus infection rate had surged to 1,038 per 100,000 population.

LONDON — London Mayor Sadiq Khan on Friday declared a major incident over the rapid spread of the coronavirus in the U.K.'s capital city.

He had previously warned the virus was "out of control" and the National Health Service was "on the cusp of being overwhelmed."

"I have declared a major incident in London because the threat this virus poses to our city is at crisis point," Khan said via Twitter.

"One in 30 Londoners now has COVID-19. If we do not take immediate action now, our NHS could be overwhelmed and more people will die," he added.

Major incidents have previously been declared in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017 and the terror attacks at Westminster Bridge in March 2017 and London Bridge in November 2019.

The announcement comes shortly after weekly data through to Jan. 2 found London's coronavirus infection rate had surged to 1,038 per 100,000 population. This figure compares with a city-wide infection rate of 818 per 100,000 for the previous week.

By comparison, the national infection rate stood at 612 per 100,000 for the week ending Jan. 2.

Strained health facilities

The increased pressure on already strained health facilities in the city coincides with the resurgent spread of Covid-19, as the U.K. scrambles to contain a highly infectious variant of the virus.

On Wednesday, the Health Service Journal reported, citing a leaked NHS England briefing to the capital's most senior doctors, that London's hospitals were on track to be overwhelmed by Covid within two weeks.

The report said the NHS England presentation had projected that, even if additional Covid patients grew at the slowest rate considered likely, the capital city's health service would be short of nearly 2,000 general and acute and intensive care beds by Jan. 19.

In a statement provided to CNBC, NHS England London medical director Dr. Vin Diwakar, said: "Hospitals in London are coming under significant pressure from high Covid-19 infection rates which is why they have opened hundreds of surge critical care beds and are planning to open more, including opening the London Nightingale."

"While staff are going the extra mile to care for patients it is crucial that people do everything they can to reduce transmission of the virus."

A nurse adjusts her PPE in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit) in St George's Hospital in Tooting, south-west London, where the number of intensive care beds for the critically sick has had to be increased from 60 to 120, the vast majority of which are for coronavirus patients.
Victoria Jones - PA Images | PA Images | Getty Images
A nurse adjusts her PPE in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit) in St George's Hospital in Tooting, south-west London, where the number of intensive care beds for the critically sick has had to be increased from 60 to 120, the vast majority of which are for coronavirus patients.

Daily death toll hits record

Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday announced the third national lockdown for England in an attempt to curb the virus spread. He urged people to "stay at home" just like in March 2020 during the country's first national lockdown. The measures legally came into force on Wednesday.

To date, the U.K. has recorded 2.89 million cases of Covid-19, with 78,633 related deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. On Friday, the government reported that another 1,325 people had died within 28 days of a positive test, its highest daily death toll since the pandemic began.

In recent weeks, optimism about the mass rollout of Covid vaccines appears to have been tempered by the resurgent rate of virus spread.

The U.K. on Friday approved Moderna's Covid vaccine for emergency use in the country. It is the third shot that has been authorized for use in Britain, following earlier approvals for vaccines from Pfizer and BioNTech and the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca.

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