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Lockdown review date is approaching so what will happen next?


By Ali Morrison

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised reviews of the coronavirus situation every three weeks, after placing the UK into lockdown on March 23.

But while the first milestone is approaching next Monday (April 13), it may not quite be the time to get our collective hopes up just yet.

So, will the lockdown be reviewed next week, or even lifted?

It remains unclear.

Aviemore, March 29, middle of the day
Aviemore, March 29, middle of the day

The Government said earlier today that the plan to review measures would take place "on or around" the three-week mark on Monday – but did not provide a specific date.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who is standing in for the Prime Minister, previously said the review would not take place as scheduled, as Mr Johnson remains in hospital.

The PM's spokesman said that key Government advisers suggest it is still too early to predict when the pandemic will peak and they can safely ease restrictions but urged the public to "stick with it" at such a "critical time".

The latest data from a specially designed Covid-19 symptom tracker app suggests the rate of new symptoms being reported nationally has slowed down in the past few days.

Researchers say the drop indicates that, although the number of hospital admissions and deaths in the UK are still rising, they should start to fall in about two weeks if social distancing continues.

The Government's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance also said yesterday that the figures "could be moving in the right direction" – taking us closer to the end of lockdown.

But it could be a few more weeks yet. Health experts have noted a lag of around two weeks in the hospitalisation and death rate data behind actions taken to slow the disease.

Sir Patrick added that health advisers would need another "week or so" before they could be sure that numbers were indeed going down.

Ministers and scientists have been reluctant to say what exact requirements must be met before they relax the rules, and are still emphasising the importance of maintaining social distancing.

Deputy chief medical officer Jenny Harries has said that the UK must continue to be "responsible" before the lockdown can be lifted "gradually", adding that the process was likely to be "spaced".

Citizens in Wuhan, China - the city where the coronavirus crisis began - were officially taken out of their lockdown that began on January 23 earlier today, prompting much celebration.

Restrictions will not be entirely abandoned; schools remain closed, temperatures are still checked before entering buildings and masks are encouraged, as the Chinese government looks to avoid a resurgence of the virus.

Other countries are also showing signs of lifting certain restrictions, such as Norway, which says it plans to begin reducing lockdown from the end of April.


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