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Coronavirus: Schools and workplaces could see 'local lockdowns'


Local lockdowns could see schools and workplaces targeted in areas of England that have "flare-ups" of coronavirus, the communities secretary has said.

Robert Jenrick said restrictions could be introduced at "a micro level" to control the virus in particular communities.

The measures will be part of the test and trace system, which will be ready by next week, he said.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock will give more details shortly, Mr Jenrick added.

Mr Hancock first mentioned the "local lockdowns" during Tuesday's coronavirus briefing.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Boris Johnson will be questioned by senior MPs later amid continued calls for his top adviser to resign.

Around 40 Tory MPs have called for Dominic Cummings to stand down or be fired after details of his 260-mile journey to County Durham during lockdown came to light.

Mr Jenrick said the government's test and trace system would have a "local element" and identify flare-ups in particular places, such as parts of towns, schools, hospitals and workplaces.

"That enables us then to take action in that place which will be restrictive on the individuals who live and work there... but as a result of that we'll be able to provide greater freedom to millions of other people across the country, enabling us to continue to ease the lockdown, ease the return to school, to work and to the daily activities that we all want to get back to," he told the BBC.

Under government plans to ease lockdown restrictions, the Joint Biosecurity Centre will identify changes in infection rates - using testing, environmental and workplace data - and advise chief medical officers.

As a result, schools, businesses or workplaces could be closed in areas that see spikes in infection rates, the government's plan says.

A testing, tracking and tracing system is regarded as vital if the virus is to be kept in check while lockdown restrictions are eased.

NHS leaders are concerned there could be a second spike of infections.

Widespread testing will be followed up by contact tracing of anyone who has been in recent contact with individuals testing positive - they could be told to self-isolate for 14 days.

The system will help detect where there may be local outbreaks - and that could result in local restrictions such as workplace and school closures.

But the ability of the current testing system to get back results quickly is still questionable. Making contact tracing work through national call centres and local authority teams will be a complex task.

Earlier this month Mr Jenrick said that it was the government's "strong preference" for lockdown measures to be lifted uniformly, but some restrictions could be reintroduced locally if necessary.

But he said the local interventions that could soon be considered are "quite different from making major changes to lockdown measures in one part of the country versus another".

Latest government figures show the number of people to die with coronavirus in the UK rose by 412 to 37,460 on Wednesday.

The number of people in hospital with Covid-19 has been gradually declining since the peak over Easter.

However, the picture is different across the UK's nations and regions, with numbers falling faster in some areas than others.

Cases were originally concentrated in London, the Midlands and the North West of England. But South Wales and parts of the North West and North East also have a high proportions of cases.

Last week, Mr Johnson said England will have a "world-beating" test, track and trace system in place from June - with 25,000 contact tracers, able to track 10,000 new cases a day.

But Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents hospitals and other NHS trusts in England, said such assertions were "really not helpful" when local authorities "only got to start working on the plans five days ago".

He warned the government to be "very careful" about easing lockdown measures before a local test, track and trace infrastructure is in place.

Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have set out their own plans for testing and tracing.

Contact tracing is a system used to slow the spread of infectious diseases by identifying people patients have been in contact with. One method involves tracking by phone or email, while another uses a location-tracking mobile app.

Earlier in May, the PM said his "ambition" was to hit 200,000 tests "by the end of this month - and then go even higher".

Downing Street said it remains confident of hitting that target - which the BBC's health editor Hugh Pym, citing government sources, said refers to lab capacity rather than individual tests - by Monday, with that ability standing at 154,120 in the 24 hours up to 09:00 BST on Tuesday.

In other developments:

  • Mr Jenrick has confirmed there will not be a formal review of penalties handed out for childcare-related travel. It came after the health secretary said the government would look at the issue when responding to a question from the public at Tuesday's daily briefing

  • The charity that runs the national domestic abuse helpline is reporting a 10-fold increase in visits to its website in the past two weeks

  • Mums appear to be doing most of the housework and childcare during lockdown, according to a new study

  • A group representing hairdressers in the UK says politicians are taking too long to give salons permission to open

  • Demand from house hunters rebounded as curbs on the sector were lifted in England - but the trend may be short-lived, analysis suggests

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