Covid-19: Hancock warns flexing of rules 'could be fatal'
Matt Hancock did not rule out strengthening current restrictions and told the BBC's Andrew Marr the NHS was under "very serious pressure".
It comes after almost 60,000 new cases of coronavirus were reported in the UK on Saturday and the number of deaths after a positive test passed 80,000.
Scientist Prof Peter Horby warned the UK was in "the eye of the storm".
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the rules were tough but "may not be tough enough" and called for the government to hold daily press conferences to avoid "mixed messages".
Mr Hancock told Andrew Marr "every time you try to flex the rules that could be fatal" and said staying at home was the "most important thing we can do collectively as a society".
The health secretary said he did not want to speculate on whether the government would further strengthen restrictions.
"People need to not just follow the letter of the rules but follow the spirit as well and play their part," he said.
His comments came after Home Secretary Priti Patel defended police over enforcing lockdown rules following the case of two women who were fined for going for a walk five miles from their homes - a decision which is now under review.
The government has launched a campaign telling people to act like they have got the virus in a bid to tackle the rise in infections.
Under the national lockdown, people in England must stay at home and can go out only for limited reasons such as food shopping, exercise, or work if they cannot do so from home. Similar measures are in place across much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Prof Horby, who is chairman of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag), said there may be "early signs that something is beginning to bite" in terms of the restrictions - but if they did not then stricter measures would be needed.
He told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: "I really hope people take this very seriously. It was bad in March, it's much worse now.
"We've seen record numbers across the board, record numbers of cases, record numbers of hospitalisations, record numbers of deaths."
"We are in a situation where everything that was risky in the past is now more risky," he said.
Prof Horby said the early signs were encouraging that the vaccines would be effective against the new Covid variants - first identified in the UK and in South Africa - and he did not want people to "hide under the duvet".
"We can see the end game now," he said.
Analysis, by BBC health correspondent Jim Reed
Higher cases inevitably mean more hospitalisations and more deaths.
The most recent figures show that, on average, 894 people per day are now dying within 28 days of a positive Covid test, up from 438 at the start of December.
The spike in cases since Christmas means that figure is almost certain to get worse before the most recent lockdown measures can start to have any affect.
Scientists think the new variant of the disease is more "transmissible", possibly because each infected individual produces more of the actual virus - sometimes referred to as the viral load.
Vaccination should help to protect the most vulnerable from serious symptoms but we don't yet know if receiving the jab stops an individual contracting the virus and passing it on to others.
Scientists say that may mean even tougher restrictions will be needed to bring the R-number below one and start to reduce the overall size of the pandemic.
Mass community testing is to be rolled out this week, the government has said, and the health secretary said that around two million people had been vaccinated, with some 200,000 jabs being given daily.
Mr Hancock said by autumn every adult in England would be offered a vaccine.
January 11, 2021 at 01:38AM
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-55609968
Labels: BBC News
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