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Covid wards 'full of children' as UK pandemic explodes

Britain has reactivated emergency hospitals built at the start of the pandemic and shut primary schools in London on Friday (local time) to counter the rapid spread of a much more infectious variant of the novel coronavirus.

With more than 50,000 new daily cases of Covid-19 for the last four days, the health service said it was preparing for an anticipated rush of patients and needed more beds.

The announcement comes just days after the Royal London Hospital told staff in an email it was now in “disaster medicine mode” and unable to provide high standard critical care.

With the capital one of the areas worst-hit by the new variant, which is thought to be up to 70 per cent more infectious, the government also decided to close all London primary schools, reversing a decision made just two days ago.

A patient outside The Royal London Hospital a day after London recorded 50,000 new cases in one day. Source: Getty Images
A patient outside The Royal London Hospital a day after London recorded 50,000 new cases in one day. Source: Getty Images

“Children’s education and wellbeing remains a national priority,” Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said. “Moving further parts of London to remote education really is a last resort and a temporary solution.”

Laura Duffell, a matron at King’s College Hospital in London, said the new strain of Covid was affecting children and younger adults with no underlying health conditions in increasingly worrying numbers.

Speaking on BBC Radio, she described “whole wards of children” suffering from Covid.

“It’s very different. That’s what makes it so much scarier for us as doctors, nurses and porters and everyone else who is working on the front line.

“We have children who are coming in. It was minimally affecting children in the first wave... we now have a whole ward of children here and I know that some of my colleagues are in the same position, where they have a whole ward of children with Covid.”

Some in the British medical community have since disputed Ms Duffell’s claims.

“As of now we are not seeing significant pressure from COVID-19 in paediatrics across the UK. As cases in the community rise there will be a small increase in the number of children we see with COVID-19,” the UK’s Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health said in a statement in response to the radio interview.

“The overwhelming majority of children and young people have no symptoms or very mild illness only. The new variant appears to affect all ages.”

Cases after rocketed upwards in recent weeks. Source: UK gov
Cases after rocketed upwards in recent weeks. Source: UK gov

Britain is battling a new wave of a virus that has already killed more than 74,000 people and crushed the economy.

One of the worst hit countries in the world, it recorded 53,285 cases in the last 24 hours on Friday, and 613 new deaths.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government has been criticised for frequent reversals during the pandemic, including delaying lockdown during the first wave in March and abandoning a system to award school grades without exams.

The temporary ‘Nightingale’ hospitals at locations such as convention centres were one success, built by the military in a matter of days. They were barely used but have remained on standby.

A Sky News report said intensive care units of three London hospitals were full on New Year’s Eve, forcing patients to be transferred to other hospitals for critical care.

“In anticipation of pressures rising from the spread of the new variant infection, the NHS London Region were asked to ensure the Nightingale was reactivated and ready to admit patients should it be needed,” a spokeswoman for the National Health Service (NHS) said.

Woman wears a face mask as she walks through London. Source: Getty Images
Woman wears a face mask as she walks through London. Source: Getty Images

The Royal College of Nursing warned however that the country does not have enough nurses to staff the new sites, especially with many sick with the virus or forced to isolate.

On schooling, the government said it had to shut all primary schools in the capital following a review of the transmission rates. On Wednesday (local time), Williamson had outlined a plan to delay the reopening of secondary schools but open most primaries, including across much of the capital, on time next week after Christmas break.

The opposition Labour Party said the last-minute reversal would cause chaos for parents.

with Reuters

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