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It’s a shocker. The Office for National Statistics says just 51% of people in England who have tested positive for covid are bothering to follow the official isolation guidelines.
The legal requirement to self isolate after a positive covid test came to an end at the end of February. April saw new guidelines for people testing positive, asking them to avoid contact with others until their symptoms died off or they stopped feeling poorly. Sadly only half ‘adhered fully to self isolation guidance’.
While it’s similar to the number for mid-March it reveals a ‘significant decrease’ in levels of adherence compared to earlier this year. And that means covid complacency has well and truly set in.
‘Covid complacency’ comes with a price Down Under
Australia has reported over 50,000 new infections for three days in a row, with a total death toll of 7721. This takes May cases past half a million and deaths past 500, and Australia's per capita infection rate has soared to become one of the highest in the world. They’re expecting a nasty spike over the coming winter.
Chris Moy, VP of the Australian Medical Association, says letting restrictions go after almost two years of being strict is the culprit.
"We are up there with the very largest case numbers in the world, partly because we didn't have so many cases earlier but the complacency, the freedom has a price."
Covid complacency becomes a worldwide concern
At the same time other countries are struggling. Guyana is suffering a new wave. Indonesia and Ghana are both very worried about covid complacency. The same goes for the Philippines, India, and South Africa.
Over in the USA Joe Biden is warning world leaders against covid complacency. South Korea is suffering badly from a run of new cases, as is Rwanda. In fact the whole of Africa is being seen by some as a worrying melting pot where few are vaccinated, there’s not a lot of testing going on, and reported cases are probably far lower than the real picture.
The global UV light covid killing tech boom rumbles on
Every time we search Google for news about UV light tech killing covid, we come up with more companies and countries using tech like ours to keep people safe from infection. No wonder a new report on Yahoo Finance predicts the global UV disinfection market could hit an awe-inspiring US $8.3 billion by 2027.
Others predict the North American UV disinfection market alone could easily hit $2.46 billion by 2028.
Take Don K. Milton, professor of occupational and environmental health at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Health, over in the USA. He knows conventional UV-C light has been widely used in hospitals, prisons and more for over 8 decades. Because conventional UV light can damage the skin and eye, you can’t shine it directly at people or other living beings. But Far UV-C’s shorter wavelength means it’s safe. Milton imagines portable devices mounted in ceilings to limit the spread of pathogens in places where people gather. We knew this already, of course, since we’re already busy supplying the kind of units he’s imagining to businesses of every kind across the UK and beyond.
David Michaels, professor of environmental and occupational health at George Washington University, also in the USA, agrees. He has told CBS news that he hopes the tech will join ventilation, filtration, masks and vaccination as everyday ways to stay safe from covid and a host more nasty pathogens.
Keep covid at bay with our proven UV tech
More than 100 companies, large and small, have already fitted our brilliant UV-C lamps to their premises, keeping people safe from infection and also keeping covid at bay in a wider sense. The fewer people spread it, the fewer of us can catch it, and the better we’ll be able to navigate a future where everybody feels safe in crowds, and indoors.