A further 28,773 confirmed cases in the UK were announced by the government on Monday … :shock:
That’s 186,422 in the last 7 days * … :!:
This might well be the calm before the storm …
Some may say it’s time to think differently about Covid
The rollout of the vaccination programme has altered everything, reducing both the individual risk and the wider one to the health system.
Back in January, about one in 10 infections could be expected to translate into a hospital admission 10 days later. Now that figure appears to be somewhere between one in 40 and one in 50.
What is more, those ending up in hospital seem to be less sick, and need less intensive treatment.
The risk of death, as a result, has reduced even further. In January about one in 60 cases resulted in someone dying. Today it’s fewer than one in 1,000.
However:
This does not mean England - and the rest of the UK for that matter - is not heading for a significant third wave.
Infection rates are rising. If they rise enough, that has the potential to cause a significant number of hospitalisations, possibly 1,000 a day before summer is out.
But serious illness happens all the time. In the depths of winter there can be 1,000 admissions a day for respiratory infections.
Flu alone killed more than 20,000 people in England in the winter of 2017-18. There was no talk of the need to introduce restrictions or curtail freedoms then.
But:
What if infection rates keep rising and that wall of immunity is slow to kick in?
Understandable concerns have also been raised about those who are at risk because they have conditions such as blood cancer which mean the vaccines do not work as well or who have a higher chance of exposure because of their jobs, such as shop or factory workers.
There is also Long Covid to contend with - although the risks of this are far from fully understood.
The UK is, perhaps, the first country to find ourselves in this situation, where it is attempting to return to normal in the face of a rapidly rising rate of infection and a more infectious variant, Delta.