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Britain comes together to clap for carers on Covid frontline – as it happened
Government signs deal for 10m antibody tests; 17% of Londoners and 5% of rest of country may have had Covid-19; official UK death toll rises to 36,042
Thu 21 May 2020 15.31 EDT
First published on Thu 21 May 2020 02.24 EDT- Matt Hancock's press conference - Summary
- Hancock says 17% of Londoners may have had coronavirus
- Matt Hancock's press conference
- New NHS surcharge policy - the details
- How Johnson defended NHS surcharge for migrant care workers at PMQs yesterday
- Migrant care workers to be exempt from NHS surcharge after No 10 U-turn
- Students in England can return to university to collect their belongings, DfE says
- Nicola Sturgeon eases coronavirus lockdown rules in Scotland
- UK records a further 338 coronavirus deaths, taking total to 36,042
- No 10 says it has no plans to review NHS surcharge
- Sadiq Khan says he's considering making face coverings compulsory on London tubes and buses
- More Tories join call for migrant care workers to be exempt from NHS surcharge
- Immigration to UK from non-EU countries hit 45-year high in 2019, ONS says
- No 10 dismisses Arcuri complaint about Johnson as 'waste of police time'
- Schools in Scotland to re-open from 11 August, Sturgeon says
- Sturgeon explains what will be allowed in phase one of lockdown easing from 28 May
- Sturgeon says there have been further 37 deaths in Scotland, taking total to 2,221
- Scottish government publishes its routemap for easing lockdown
- Nicola Sturgeon's statement to MSPs about Scotland's routemap for easing lockdown
- London assembly to resume its own inquiry into Johnson's dealings with Jennifer Arcuri as mayor
- Making migrant care workers pay NHS surcharge 'immoral' and 'monstrous', says former Tory chair
- Number of people with coronavirus in England remains stable, says ONS
- No-deal Brexit 'would overwhelm local emergency teams'
- UK economy in 'unprecedented downturn' as activity keeps falling
- 78% of workers in accommodation and food services have been furloughed, ONS survey suggests
- Agenda for the day
- Welsh government reported to human rights watchdog over testing
- NHS Trusts risk being overwhelmed in second peak, says health boss
- Launch test and trace now or risk second wave, NHS leaders warn
Live feed
- Matt Hancock's press conference - Summary
- Hancock says 17% of Londoners may have had coronavirus
- Matt Hancock's press conference
- New NHS surcharge policy - the details
- How Johnson defended NHS surcharge for migrant care workers at PMQs yesterday
- Migrant care workers to be exempt from NHS surcharge after No 10 U-turn
- Students in England can return to university to collect their belongings, DfE says
- Nicola Sturgeon eases coronavirus lockdown rules in Scotland
- UK records a further 338 coronavirus deaths, taking total to 36,042
- No 10 says it has no plans to review NHS surcharge
- Sadiq Khan says he's considering making face coverings compulsory on London tubes and buses
- More Tories join call for migrant care workers to be exempt from NHS surcharge
- Immigration to UK from non-EU countries hit 45-year high in 2019, ONS says
- No 10 dismisses Arcuri complaint about Johnson as 'waste of police time'
- Schools in Scotland to re-open from 11 August, Sturgeon says
- Sturgeon explains what will be allowed in phase one of lockdown easing from 28 May
- Sturgeon says there have been further 37 deaths in Scotland, taking total to 2,221
- Scottish government publishes its routemap for easing lockdown
- Nicola Sturgeon's statement to MSPs about Scotland's routemap for easing lockdown
- London assembly to resume its own inquiry into Johnson's dealings with Jennifer Arcuri as mayor
- Making migrant care workers pay NHS surcharge 'immoral' and 'monstrous', says former Tory chair
- Number of people with coronavirus in England remains stable, says ONS
- No-deal Brexit 'would overwhelm local emergency teams'
- UK economy in 'unprecedented downturn' as activity keeps falling
- 78% of workers in accommodation and food services have been furloughed, ONS survey suggests
- Agenda for the day
- Welsh government reported to human rights watchdog over testing
- NHS Trusts risk being overwhelmed in second peak, says health boss
- Launch test and trace now or risk second wave, NHS leaders warn
Scotland’s first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, also came out to pay her respects tonight.
According to the BBC, “millions of people” were clapping across the country tonight, among them 100-year-old Dabirul Choudhury, from St Albans, who’s raised over £177,000 for coronavirus relief.
On my street in central Brixton, London, only two parties came to their windows to clap for about 15 seconds tonight. In previous weeks, people could be seen in most windows clapping and cheering.
Here a video that was posted by the British Medical Association in Scotland:
Boris Johnson came out of No 10 for a solo clap tonight, without his fiancée Carrie Symonds, who had accompanied him last week.
This from London Mayor Sadiq Khan:
This just in from Forces News, showing military staff in Bosnia, Turks and Caicos and Cornwall clapping for carers.
This from Rosena Allin-Khan, the Labour MP for Tooting.
People across the UK will pay tribute to coronavirus key workers tonight at 8pm BST.
Every Thursday for the past nine weeks, people have been clapping from their doorsteps, windows and streets for NHS staff, bus drivers, retail staff and other key workers who have been risking their lives by going to work during the pandemic.
Tonight’s Clap for Carers will go ahead against the backdrop of the government’s scrapping of the NHS surcharge for migrant health and care workers, a U-turn that came on Thursday after pressure from opposition and Conservative backbenchers.
Daily summary
Here are the main points from today.
- Migrant health and care workers to be exempt from NHS surcharge after U-turn
Downing Street has bowed to concerted pressure from the opposition and Conservative backbenchers to scrap the NHS surcharge for migrant health and care workers.
After backbenchers including the former health secretary Jeremy Hunt criticised the government’s position, a No 10 spokesman said Boris Johnson had asked the Home Office and the Department for Health and Social Care to remove NHS and care workers from the scheme as soon as possible.
- Hancock, the health secretary, confirmed the government will roll out antibody testing next week, having signed contracts for 10m tests
Antibody tests show whether or not people have had coronavirus.Hancock said: “We’ve signed contracts to supply in the coming months over 10 million tests from Roche and Abbott. From next week we will begin rolling these out in a phased way, at first to health and care staff, patients and residents.
“The UK government has arranged supplies of these tests on behalf of the devolved administrations and each devolved nation is deciding how to use its test allocation and how testing will be prioritised and managed locally.
“This is an important milestone and it represents further progress in our national testing programme.”
- Hancock says 17% of Londoners may have had coronavirus
He says antibody tests suggest that 17% of people in London may have had coronavirus. In the rest of the country the figure is 5%, he says.
- UK records a further 338 coronavirus deaths, taking total to 36,042.
The latest UK figures reveal that 36,042 people have died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus as of 5pm on Wednesday, up by 338 from 35,704 the day before.
In the 24-hour period up to 9am on Thursday, 128,340 tests were carried out or dispatched, with a total of 67,681 people tested and 2,615 positive results.
A total of 3,090,566 tests have been carried out, and 250,908 cases have been confirmed positive.
Excess deaths in care homes during the coronavirus pandemic have peaked and “come down a long way”, England’s chief medical officer has confirmed.
Prof Chris Whitty said there was a clear peak in excess deaths in hospitals in early April in England and Wales, followed by care homes.
The government adviser told the Downing Street press conference: “If you look at care homes, the other thing which people are rightly very concerned about... the care home deaths have peaked and come down a long way.
“But that peak was slightly later - one to two weeks after the peak in hospitals.”
Whitty said figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show the excess deaths in care homes compared to the five-year average fell from 4,331 to 2,247 in the week ending 8 May.
Earlier this week, Prof Martin Green, the chief executive of Care England, told the health and social care committee he thought care homes were “probably at the top of the curve” in Covid-19 cases.
One of the new coronavirus antibody tests to be rolled out across the UK is being produced in south Wales.
It is understood that Ortho Clinical Diagnostics, which has a factory in Pencoed, Bridgend, is the only firm producing the blood tests in the UK.
On Thursday, Wales’ health minister, Vaughan Gething, welcomed news of the test, which will be available from Ortho and other suppliers across the UK, saying it was an “important step forward” in stopping the spread of Covid-19.
He said: “This test will tell us if people have already had coronavirus. But it is important to say, although the test can tell if someone has had the virus, it’s not certain as to how much immunity they’ll have to the virus.”
Gething said work was being done in Wales to develop another type of antibody test involving taking a pinprick of blood and testing it with a device to give a result in just minutes, which would help to make antibody testing more widely available.
The US firm Ortho has had a site in Pencoed for 40 years and employs more than 500 people. It produces millions of tests each week for a range of diseases and medical conditions which are distributed around the world.
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