Ovid Need a certificate to enter Tavern, bar, restaurant with club According to reports, according to a plan to avoid the fourth wave of the virus in the fall.
These proposals mean that British people must show their vaccination passports before entering entertainment venues to prove that they are double spurs or have recently taken a negative test.
Experts hope this move will increase the stagnant vaccination rate among young people and limit the surge in cases again.
A kind Downing Street A source told The Times: “The autumn vaccine passport may become an important tool to keep us open.”
Another added: “If we can demonstrate the real benefits of vaccination in our daily lives, then it could be a very useful tool.”
Earlier this week, the British government issued a certification review report saying that although the so-called vaccine passport will not be used now, it does not rule out the possibility that England will face a “difficult situation in autumn or winter.”
Live Update
Professor Stokes Lampard welcomes possible exemption from self-isolation for NHS staff
Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard welcomed the news that NHS staff might be able to avoid self-isolation if they received two coronavirus injections.
She told BBC Radio 4’s Today program: “We are happy to see that the evidence has been reviewed and is moving forward. This sounds like a wise next step.
“This will help healthcare professionals, but we must be highly vigilant about our infection prevention and control measures, and everyone can play their part in this.”
She said that the medical staff who had to take time off after being “pinged” by the app “means that the pressure on other employees is increasing.”
She said: “This is a big problem that we are seeing now, partly because of the large number of children who have been returned home from school and are quarantined, and our young people have a high infection rate. This inevitably means that medical staff must follow The state guides self-isolation.”
But she added: “We have seen hospitals cancel operations and reduce operations, and we have seen general practitioner operations begin to reduce the more conventional services they provide again.”
The Dean of the Royal College of Medicine said she was “deeply concerned” about July 19
Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, Dean of the Royal College of Medicine, told BBC Radio 4’s Today program that she has been “deeply concerned” since it was announced that the country might open on July 19.
The college issued a statement on Friday warning that in terms of the pandemic, the situation “will get worse before it gets better”.
Professor Stokes Lampard said: “But there seems to be a misunderstanding that from then on (July 19) life will return to normal and we can give up all preventive measures. Frankly speaking, that would be dangerous. “
She added: “We all want to make sure that the public is fully aware that this epidemic is far from over. When the 19th comes, what we need is a responsible approach and a very cautious way to relax restrictions.”
She said that the hospital is seeing more and more young children admitted.
She said: “In terms of how busy we are, it feels like midwinter in the hospital and GP surgery, not July when the number of infections is usually very small.”
New South Wales, Australia, reports a record daily increase in Covid-19 cases in 2021
Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales, reported on Saturday that this was the largest single-day increase in local Covid-19 cases so far this year, as the total number of infections in the most recent outbreak was close to 500.
There were 50 new cases of community transmission, compared with 44 the day before, a record high in 2021. State Governor Gladys Berejiklian said at a television briefing that of Saturday’s cases, 26 were spent in the community when they were infectious.
Berejiklian said: “When you know that there are 26 cases of infection in the community, the only conclusion we can draw is that the situation will get worse before it gets better.”
There are currently 47 hospitalized cases, of which 19 are under 55 years of age. 16 people are in the intensive care unit.
The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany increased by 952
The Robert Koch Institute (RKI) showed on Saturday that the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany increased by 952 to 3,735,420.
Statistics show that the number of reported deaths increased by 35 to 91,225.
Mexico enters third wave of infection rate rises by 29%
Mexico is entering the third wave of the coronavirus pandemic. Compared with the previous week, the infection rate has risen by 29%.
But the country’s health department said on Friday that the growth was mainly from infections in younger, less vulnerable people. The number of cases is now as high as when the last surge started in September; the wave peaked in January and steadily declined before June.
But at present, only about 22% of the hospital beds in the country are occupied; during the last wave of the epidemic, the beds in many areas of the country were basically full.
Authorities said the relative decline in severe cases among the elderly was the result of the country’s vaccination campaign, which had vaccinated about 39% of adults with at least one dose as of Friday.
Welcome to the Standard Coronavirus Live Blog on Saturday, July 10.