UK: +44 1379 658 721
Ireland: +353 89 221 3723
USA: +1 754 252 3536
Middle East - N. Africa: + 971 52 873 4738
Australia: +61 3 9310 5259
As we write the world's covid death toll has exceeded 3.95 million, with 182.7 million confirmed cases, although exerts at Johns Hopkins University estimate the true number of cases will be much higher. Our World In Data website says over 1.84 billion people around the globe have had at least one dose of a vaccine. And on 30th June one of the government's science advisors said that England is “on line to repeat the mistakes of last summer”.
Apparently England risks repeating last summer's disastrous wave if the government goes ahead and lifts covid restrictions while infection rates are still too high. In summer 2020 we never really reduced infections enough to deal with the virus. When the schools and universities went back in autumn 2020, and people went back to work, the weather nosedived. We all spent a lot more time indoors, and infections spiked.
In a recent radio interview the UK government advisor Stephen Reicher, from the University of St Andrews, said, “This time round, we should learn from that and we should get infections low to a point where we’re in a much better place in the autumn, where we don’t have to reimpose restrictions.”
The current date for freedom is 19th July, but right now coronavirus cases are rising. Official figures say there were just over 145 cases per 100,000 people in England from 17th to 24th June, up dramatically from just under 94 per 100,000 the week before.
Booster vaccinations should kick off in September
The UK vaccination committee says there needs to be a vaccine booster programme in place from September 2021, in time for winter, designed to maximise protection for those of us who are the most at risk of serious illness. That means immunosuppressed adults, older people in care homes, those over 70, clinically vulnerable adults and frontline health and social care workers should all receive a booster jab before winter sets in. Most younger adults will have had their second jab by the end of summer, so they won't need a booster yet.
What about vaccinations for children?
Adults might be safely vaccinated, but children can catch covid and while it's rare for them to get very ill, they can pass it on to older people, including their teachers, parents and grandparents. But first we need to know the vaccines are 100% safe for the very young. Scientists are currently looking at the data 'very carefully.'
New guidance about when should you have a covid test
Apparently broadening the covid symptoms list could be really useful in identifying more cases and making self-isolation more effective. An article in the British Medical Journal advises people to get a PCR test if they have a high temperature, a new continuous cough and a loss or change in sense of smell or taste. On the other hand the World Health Organization lists 13 symptoms associated with the virus, including a sore throat and headache. As the researchers said, “Most spread is from symptomatic cases around the time of symptom onset, and interrupting transmission depends on early identification and isolation of contagious individuals. The narrow UK case definition therefore limits this detection, restricting the effectiveness of the test, trace and isolate programme.”
The EU's 10 week covid decline ends
While cases have been shooting up in the UK, an impressive ten week decline in infections across Europe has ended. A new wave is on the cards unless “we remain disciplined”, according to the WHO, which has appealed to the EU to get their vaccination skates on to help battle the highly transmissible Delta variant. At the same time Russia is suffering a new Delta wave, and is quickly rolling out booster jabs to help it fight back.
Long covid drags on
6th June saw an estimated 962,000 people experiencing self-reported long covid symptoms for more than a month after their first infection. The UK's Office for National Statistics says it's down a little bit on May's total of 1.02 million. Almost a million people with ongoing symptoms could put an enormous extra strain on the NHS in future.
Smooth things out with our UVC LED covid disinfection technology 
It's hard to cope with the constant changes, the ups and downs, the openings and closings that covid brings. When you're running a business, our UVC covid disinfection machines help provide a level of valuable certainty, keeping you, your employees, your suppliers, partners, and customers safe.