Latest covid news – The ups and the downs
The covid news over the past few days has been up and down as usual, as the world watches the UK’s big covid experiment unfold. We remain the only nation letting covid run wild. Cases are increasing, hospitalisations are on the up, and to be honest the future is looking less certain than ever. Some claim the nation is nothing more than a giant petri-dish right now.
While nobody knows how the current boom in UK cases will pan out, we do know one thing: our LED UVC robots kill covid and many more coronaviruses, and they make covid disinfection a lot more effective and cheaper than a team of human cleaners could ever hope to achieve. Here’s the news.
5 million global covid death toll – UK one of the 5 worst for covid deaths
The global covid death toll has hit 5 million, and the US, Brazil, India, Mexico and UK account for over half of all worldwide deaths.
Vaccinated twice? You can still catch covid from your household
If you’ve had both jabs you can still catch covid. The risk stands at one in four, 25%, compared to non-vaccinated people, who are at 38% risk of getting the delta variant from their household contacts.
Those who were jabbed twice enjoyed a faster decline in their ‘viral load’ over the course of the infection compared to un-vaccinated people, which is good news, but the study also revealed the viral load intake was higher in older people.
What does it mean? Keith Neal at the University of Nottingham, UK, said this suggests there’s a need
‘reconsider the current rule in England that people who are vaccinated do not need to isolate if someone in their household is infected’.
Conversely, Sheila Bird at the University of Cambridge said the low numbers of people in the study made any conclusions drawn from it
‘foolhardy’.
What do you do? With the government mostly leaving it up to the public, with no plans to launch a Plan B so far, your actions are actually all about your own personal attitude to risk.
What is your personal attitude to covid risk?
Are you staying in until UK case numbers start to fall back down? Maybe you’re perfectly confident going out and about, like everything’s back to normal? Perhaps you have a foot in each camp and while you’d love to go out, you have no real idea how to keep yourself safe at the moment. You’re not alone. Things are pretty uncertain in the UK, especially in England.
What do you do if you run a business? You want to attract back as many customers as you can – and that means catering for people with every level of risk aversion and risk awareness. The only way to keep everyone safe is to keep everything properly disinfected... and the only practical way to achieve that is to use a UVC robot to disinfect spaces, surfaces and the air, and kill covid.
More covid news for 1st November 2021
- UK ‘covid passes’ will be accepted throughout the EU, treated as the equivalent of the EU’s own digital covid passes
- The UK has removed the final seven countries from its red list, but how many countries will be prepared to let UK residents in under the current experimental ‘let it run wild’ situation?
- Wales is introducing stricter social distancing rules in a bid to ‘turn the tide’ of surging infections – and they won’t rule out more restrictions in future
- A trial in Brazil shows the antidepressant fluvoxamine is effective as a covid treatment – sufferers are less likely to need a long stay in hospital after being given the drug, which has useful anti-inflammatory effects
- The covid testing lab that was suspended in October is ongoing. Apparently a “full investigation remains ongoing” and there will be an update in due course
- Moscow has gone into strict lockdown again thanks to ‘record’ surging cases and death rates The country has just seen a daily new case total of 40,096 along with 1159 deaths – that’s fewer daily cases than the UK has seen recently, yet England remains wide open
- A ‘damning’ report confirms the NHS Test and Trace programme has not delivered its main objective and has not enabled people to return to a more normal way of life despite the ‘eye watering’ sums of money it cost. It isn’t the NHS at fault, it’s the government’s handling of the tech that caused the issues. “The national Test and Trace programme was allocated eye-watering sums of taxpayers’ money in the midst of a global health and economic crisis,” said Meg Hillier, chair of the Public Accounts Committee. “It set out bold ambitions but has failed to achieve them despite the vast sums thrown at it.
- Experts are pressuring the government to get busy vaccinating pregnant women, many of whom are currently being turned away from clinics. At the same time, at least 13 pregnant women died with covid from July to September 2021
- In the USA the Pfizer/BioNTech covid vaccine has been approved for children aged 5 to 11. Experts say it will ‘prevent significant long-term adverse outcomes in children’
- A new report reveals how catching covid comes with more risk of rare neurological complications than a first vaccine dose does. Covid infection carries a much higher risk of developing neurological complications than vaccines, and that’s great news
Let’s talk covid disinfection robots
You want to get as many people as possible engaged with your business, visiting you and buying from you. If your business involves face-to-face contact, you need to reassure people they’ll be safe, and that means our covid disinfection robots. If you’d like to talk through the potential, get in touch.









