UK COVID cases cross 200,000 mark for first time | Daily News

UK COVID cases cross 200,000 mark for first time

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson greets a health worker during a tour of a vaccination centre in Buckinghamshire, South East England.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson greets a health worker during a tour of a vaccination centre in Buckinghamshire, South East England.

UK: British hospitals have switched to a "war footing" due to staff shortages caused by a wave of Omicron infections, the government said Tuesday, as the country's daily Covid caseload breached 200,000 for the first time.

The 24-hour tally, after chalking up multiple records in the run-up to New Year, hit 218,724 and another 48 deaths were reported in the latest Government data.

Hospital admissions have not hit anything like the peaks of previous waves of the pandemic, and the number of people requiring ventilation has remained flat so far.

But the state-run National Health Service (NHS) is struggling with staff forced to stay at home after testing positive, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised action to plug staffing gaps in the worst-hit areas.

The reactivation of emergency "Nightingale" clinics, along with the drafting of medical volunteers backed by army support, meant the NHS was back on a "war footing", he told a news conference.

"So anyone who thinks our battle with COVID is over, I'm afraid, is profoundly wrong. This is a moment for the utmost caution," Johnson said.

But Johnson said a new programme of daily testing for 100,000 "critical workers", including in transport and food processing, would help Britain "ride out this Omicron wave". Around 50,000 NHS staff were reportedly absent from work last week because they were ill or self-isolating. - NDTV


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