SAGE psychologist accuses No10 of 'abdicating responsibility for looking after the public'


Professor Robert West, a psychologist, accused ministers of 'abdicating' their responsibility for looking after the public

Professor Robert West, a psychologist, accused ministers of ‘abdicating’ their responsibility for looking after the public

Boris Johnson is ‘abdicating’ responsibility for looking after the public by dropping the last Covid curbs, a SAGE psychologist has claimed.

Professor Robert West, who advises the top committee, today blasted the plans as ‘irresponsible’ and risking between 20,000 and 80,000 deaths a year. 

Professor West also alleged Covid patients were being treated differently from those with other diseases like cancer, where ‘an awful lot’ is done to try to prevent them.

And he said it would be ‘very surprising’ if the plan saves the billions expected, because he predicted it could lead to so many hospitalisations. 

The University College London expert was speaking to Times Radio shortly before Boris Johnson was set to unveil his ‘living with Covid’ strategy. 

It is expected to see the last measures such as self-isolation and mass testing come to an end, amid a £2billion a month saving drive from the Treasury. 

About 20,000 flu deaths are recorded in a bad flu year, which does not trigger any restrictions being imposed in England.

Similarly, all adults have been offered three doses of the Covid vaccine, with plans now in the works for a fourth dose. Ministers have invested in anti-virals to be given to vulnerable people shortly after they get infected to fight the virus. 

Pictured above is Professor Chris Whitty (right) and Sir Patrick Vallance. They are expected to join the Prime Minister this evening for a press conference when he scraps the remaining Covid rules

Pictured above is Professor Chris Whitty (right) and Sir Patrick Vallance. They are expected to join the Prime Minister this evening for a press conference when he scraps the remaining Covid rules

 

Some scientists have rallied to support the Prime Minister’s plan to ‘live with’ Covid like the flu, pointing out there is no ‘right time’ to lift the curbs.

They also say the relaxation is not a ‘cliff-edge’ change, unlike previous easings, and is not likely to trigger a sudden surge in cases. 

But others have slammed the move as ‘pantomime’, and an attempt to bring an early end to the pandemic. They have also said it comes too soon. 

Labour, the unions and medical experts argue it is simply too early to consider scrapping Covid curbs. And say it is to distract from Downing Street lockdown parties. 

Entire country probably WON’T need Covid booster jab every winter, expert says

Not every Briton will need to get a Covid booster vaccine every winter, one of the country’s top experts claimed today.

Oxford University’s Sir Andrew Pollard — who advises No10 on the jab roll out — said the current ‘wall of immunity’ will keep the virus at bay for most Britons. 

But he admitted it was ‘reasonable to think’ that the most vulnerable members of society would likely be offered top-up doses in the future.

His comments echo other scientists, who say annual Covid jabs will likely be offered to all those that get a flu shot every year. This includes the over-50s, care home residents, health workers, pregnant women, and the immunocompromised.

Sir Andrew, who is part of the team behind the AstraZeneca jab, also gave a luke-warm reception to plans to dump the last Covid measures, saying there was no ‘right or wrong’ time to relax the final rules. 

Over-75s and the most vulnerable in Britain are expected to be offered a fourth jab  within weeks. It has been six months since many received their last jab in late 2021. 

Scientists say the top-up doses may be needed because of concerns over how long immunity from the jabs lasts.    

Israel has offered fourth jabs to its over-60s and health workers since early January, and expanded the roll out to all adults later that month.

But some academics say the US, the UK and other major economies could be on the brink of over-vaccinating people in the fight against Covid. 

Railing against the plans, Professor West accused the Government of abdicating ‘its own responsibility for looking after its population’.

He said: ‘It looks as though what the Government has said is that it accepts that the country is going to have to live with somewhere between 20,000 and 80,000 Covid deaths a year and isn’t really going to do anything about it.

‘Now, that seems to me to be irresponsible.’

He added that there are a ‘large number of deaths from heart disease and cancer but we don’t just say “Well, we’ve got to live with it”.

‘We do an awful lot with heart disease and cancer and other forms of deaths to try to prevent them and to treat them, and so it seems a little odd really to be saying “Well, Covid, we’re going to treat that differently. We’re not going to try and prevent it”.’ 

Last year before Covid vaccines were widely rolled out and when the Alpha wave hit England and Wales recorded 76,000 Covid deaths — below Professor West’s estimate for after the jabs roll out.

The UK is also currently registering about 144 Covid deaths a day, which is well-below the 400 a day average at the peak of the last bad flu season in 2017/18.

And the virus is the fourth leading cause of death in England and Wales,  behind Dementia, heart disease and respiratory problems.

It has not been the leading cause of death since February 2021, at the tail-end of the Alpha wave before vaccines were widely administered. 

Professor West has previously slammed Government plans, accusing ministers of trying to get as many people infected as possible last year and saying the public were not tired of Covid rules two weeks before measures were eased.  

Some scientists supported Mr Johnson’s plans today with Sir Andrew Pollard, a top expert at Oxford University, giving them a luke-warm reception saying there was no ‘right or wrong’ time to end restrictions. 

He said it was ‘enormously difficult’ to decide when to end the final measures.

‘There isn’t a right or wrong answer to this because we don’t have a measure that helps us get there,’ he said.

Sir Andrew noted that although the measures had benefits, including breaking chains of transmission and limiting hospital admissions, there were also hidden harms. 

‘(The harms) include things, just from a health perspective, like the the impact on hospitals of having staff self-isolating, the inability to perform operations, there will be surgery cancelled today that may be critical for people because of staff who are off work during that period; the impact on education, on the workplace and the economy,’ he said.

‘The impacts on the economy and mental health will have longer-term consequences. 

‘So if we could find a measure that brings all of that together, we could work out the exact right moment (for lifting restrictions).’

Britain is also now considering plans to roll out fourth doses to the over-75s. Above is a man getting his fourth dose in Israel, which has been rolling out the extra jabs since January

Britain is also now considering plans to roll out fourth doses to the over-75s. Above is a man getting his fourth dose in Israel, which has been rolling out the extra jabs since January

Former SAGE adviser Professor Robert Dingwall has also backed the move, saying the change is ‘not a cliff-edge’. 

‘Large numbers of people are not going to start changing their behaviour overnight – but behaviour will gradually shift, as it did last year,’ he said.

He also suggested the remaining restrictions were already only having a marginal impact because of the lack of enforcement.

Other scientists called for the final relaxation to be slowed down, however, warning it risked accelerating the spread of the virus.

Dr Simon Clarke, from Reading University, said: ‘This is not a move motivated by data, despite what ministers will doubtless say; they have never outlined what the national Covid-19 picture would need to look like for this to happen. 

‘It seems to be a Government pantomime geared towards persuading people that it’s all over and I expect that in the coming days it will be linked to helping the NHS get back on its feet. 

‘However, allowing infections to run riot in the community and be transferred into hospitals, which they will probably end up being unfairly blamed for again, will just cause more problems in vulnerable patients.’

Referring to ‘Partygate’ probes, Labour’s health spokesman Wes Streeting said: ‘Boris Johnson is declaring victory before the war is over, in an attempt to distract from the police knocking at his door.

‘The Government should publish the evidence behind this decision, so the public can have faith it is being made in the national interest.’

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