‘If you have food in the house, please use that’: Hancock warns people in South African Covid areas

‘If you have food in the house, please use that’: Health Secretary tells people in South African variant areas they MUST use up stocks in cupboards and freezers before leaving to go shopping to halt spread of coronavirus

  • Another 33 cases of the South African Covid variant have been spotted in UK 
  • PHE says 143 people have now been struck down with variant since December
  • Hancock: ‘We are saying ”If you have food in the house, please use that”.’

People in areas hit by outbreaks of the new South African variant of coronavirus should eat out of their freezer and store cupboards before considering leaving the house to shop for fresh food, Matt Hancock said today.

The Heath Secretary repeated warnings that the highly transmissible strain was the main problem now facing Britain and required people to take a more strict attitude to staying at home.

New Data from Oxford University showing its vaccine cuts transmission ‘will help us all to get out of this pandemic’, he said this morning as hopes were raised over the lifting of lockdown.

But he also warned that new variants of coronavirus – which reduce the effectiveness of vaccines – could slow things down.

Another 33 cases of the troublesome South African Covid variant have been spotted in Britain, health chiefs revealed last night amid growing fears over mutant strains that experts say could make vaccines less effective.

Public Health England claimed 143 people have now been struck down with the variant since it was first discovered on British soil in December – including five in Scotland and nine in Wales. None have been found in Northern Ireland.

The senior Government minister told BBC Breakfast: ‘We’re in a national lockdown so there is not a stronger law we can bring in place that says ”Really stay at home” but the critical point is that everybody should be staying at home unless they have to.

‘If you are in one of those postcodes, it is absolutely imperative that you minimise all social contact outside of your house.

‘So this means, for instance, whereas the Government guidance to most of us is ”Do go to the shops if you need to”, in those areas, in the immediate term, we are saying ”If you have food in the house, please use that”. 

The Heath Secretary repeated warnings that the highly transmissible strain was the main problem now facing Britain and required people to take a more strict attitude to staying at home

The Heath Secretary repeated warnings that the highly transmissible strain was the main problem now facing Britain and required people to take a more strict attitude to staying at home

The Heath Secretary repeated warnings that the highly transmissible strain was the main problem now facing Britain and required people to take a more strict attitude to staying at home

The surge testing is now taking place at a variety of locations in England amid concerns about the mutant strains

The surge testing is now taking place at a variety of locations in England amid concerns about the mutant strains

The surge testing is now taking place at a variety of locations in England amid concerns about the mutant strains 

Volunteers from various emergency services and council members go door-to-door to distribute Covid-19 tests in Maidstone, Kent today

Volunteers from various emergency services and council members go door-to-door to distribute Covid-19 tests in Maidstone, Kent today

Volunteers from various emergency services and council members go door-to-door to distribute Covid-19 tests in Maidstone, Kent today

Road signs directing traffic to the Covid test centre at Paradise Wildlife Park in Broxbourne, Hertfordshire

Road signs directing traffic to the Covid test centre at Paradise Wildlife Park in Broxbourne, Hertfordshire

Road signs directing traffic to the Covid test centre at Paradise Wildlife Park in Broxbourne, Hertfordshire

Health authorities have found more than 100 cases of a coronavirus variant first identified in South Africa, prompting a scramble to deploy new testing initiatives across eight areas in England

Health authorities have found more than 100 cases of a coronavirus variant first identified in South Africa, prompting a scramble to deploy new testing initiatives across eight areas in England

Health authorities have found more than 100 cases of a coronavirus variant first identified in South Africa, prompting a scramble to deploy new testing initiatives across eight areas in England

WHERE IS DOOR-TO-DOOR TESTING BEING OFFERED?

London

W7: Hanwell (South African variant)

N17: Tottenham (South African variant)

CR4: Mitcham (South African variant)

West Midlands

WS2: Walsall (South African variant)

East of England

EN10: Broxbourne (South African variant)

South East 

ME15: Maidstone (South African variant)

GU21: Woking (South African variant)

North West

PR9: Southport (South African variant)

Liverpool (Original variant with E484K mutation)

South West

Bristol (Kent variant with E484K mutation)

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‘It is about a more stringent interpretation of the existing rules, trying to make sure that in those areas we do everything we possibly can to end all transmissions so we can get this new variant right under control.

‘There are only a handful of cases, so we have the opportunity to really stamp on it now.’ 

It came as 10 million people in the UK were revealed to have now received their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

The Health Secretary hailed the milestone as ‘hugely significant’ while the Prime Minister expressed thanks to those who had helped make it happen.

Mr Hancock said ‘every jab makes us all a bit safer’, as he made the announcement on Twitter.

In England, a total of 9,126,930 Covid-19 vaccinations took place between December 8 and February 2, according to provisional NHS England data, including first and second doses, which is a rise of 301,559 on the previous day’s figures.

Of this number, 8,663,041 were the first dose of the vaccine, a rise of 300,173 on the previous day, while 463,889 were the second dose, an increase of 1,386.

In yet another potential twist to the UK’s coronavirus crisis, officials today also announced they have found 11 cases of the Kent coronavirus variant which carries an extra mutation in Bristol.

And 32 people in Liverpool have been struck down with the original strain of the virus that has the same mutation – scientifically known as E484K. MailOnline understands the cases were spotted three weeks ago.

Around one in seven people in England would have tested positive for Covid-19 antibodies by mid-January, figures suggest.

Data from blood studies from private households suggests a rise in the number who have had coronavirus in England – up from an estimated one in nine people in December and one in 11 in November.

The figures come from the Office for National Statistics Covid-19 Infection Survey and do not include people in care homes, hospitals or other institutions.

An estimated one in nine people in Wales had been infected by mid-January, up from one in 14 in December. 

Volunteers are continuing to give out surge tests today to target areas in Woking for the new variant South African strain of Covid-19

Volunteers are continuing to give out surge tests today to target areas in Woking for the new variant South African strain of Covid-19

Volunteers are continuing to give out surge tests today to target areas in Woking for the new variant South African strain of Covid-19

A car driver is given instructions at a new drive-in Covid-19 testing centre in Southport, Merseyside  this morning

A car driver is given instructions at a new drive-in Covid-19 testing centre in Southport, Merseyside  this morning

A car driver is given instructions at a new drive-in Covid-19 testing centre in Southport, Merseyside  this morning

‘It comes with the job’: How Chris Whitty brushed off TikTok abuse 

Chris Whitty brushed off being abused by a maskless TikTok user while waiting for his Mexican lunch in Westminster – saying to the market stall owner: ‘It comes with the job’, MailOnline can reveal today.

The young man, who calls himself ‘AA Bants’, repeatedly accused the Chief Medical Officer yesterday lunchtime of ‘lying’ to Britain about the pandemic that has already claimed more than 100,000 lives in the UK.

But Rory Fischelt, 50, owner of the Santana Grill market stall on Strutton Ground, said today that Mr Whitty was ‘really cool’ and told him most people are ‘really nice’ but ‘from time to time things like this happen’.

Mr Fischelt, who has run the stall for seven years, also revealed Mr Whitty buys lunch there once a week and has an £8 ‘lunchbox’ which includes rice, Mexican beans, salad, guacamole and carnitas pork – but with no extra spice.

The clip shows Mr Whitty saying hello to passers-by but refusing to be goaded by the man who films him standing in a queue while saying: ‘You’re a liar. Mandem is a liar. You lie about the Covid-19 cases, man. Stop lying to the TV’.

The young man faced a furious backlash today, including from Downing Street which condemned his actions. The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: ‘Chris Whitty is an outstanding public servant who has worked incredibly hard and tirelessly to help steer us through what has been a very, very challenging time over the past year. And it is clearly unacceptable that somebody who has done so much is being subject to this sort of behaviour.’

 

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For Scotland, the estimate was one in 10, up from one in 13, and for Northern Ireland it was one in 11, up from one in 14.

The ONS said it had found ‘substantial variation’ in the proportion of people estimated to have tested positive for Covid-19 antibodies across the regions.

The highest figure was 21 per cent in London, followed by the West Midlands (18.8 per cent) and Yorkshire & the Humber (18.7 per cent).

South-west England was estimated to have the lowest level (8.3 per cent), followed by south-east England (10.2 per cent) and eastern England (10.8 per cent).

Estimates for the other regions were north-west England 18.1 per cent, north-east England 16.2 per cent and the East Midlands 15.7 per cent.

Meanwhile Oxford University and AstraZeneca plan to have a new Covid vaccine ready by the autumn to tackle new variants of the coronavirus, they confirmed today.

Growing evidence suggests that a mutation first found in the South African variant of the virus, and now cropping up elsewhere, can reduce how well current vaccines work because it changes the shape of the spike protein that the jabs target.

And to overcome this, jab manufacturers say they are already working on updating their vaccines because they need to be extremely specific to offer the best form of protection.

The Oxford/AstraZeneca team, makers of one of the world’s most advanced vaccines so far, say they will have their adapted version ready and manufactured before the end of 2021.

Oxford’s Professor Andrew Pollard, who is leading studies of the jab, said it would be a ‘short process’ compared to making the original vaccine from scratch.

The update could be used either as a booster for people who have already had a different vaccine or it could be used on its own for those who are still unvaccinated.

AstraZeneca’s executive vice-president, Sir Mene Pangalos, said today: ‘We’re very much aiming to have something ready by the autumn this year.’

The announcement comes after the team got a huge boost to their jab development from a study published last night that suggested it can cut transmission by up to two thirds and a single dose can prevent 76 per cent of severe illnesses for three months, with that rising to 82 per cent after the second dose.

Professor Andrew Pollard told a media briefing: ‘I think the actual work on designing a new vaccine is very, very quick because it’s essentially just switching out the genetic sequence for the spike protein, so for the updated variants.

‘Then there’s manufacturing to do and then a small-scale study.

‘All of that can be completed in a very short period of time, and the autumn is really the timing for having new vaccines available for use rather than for having the clinical trials run.’

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