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“The Westminster government said it would enact ‘Plan B’ to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed; as doctors working on the frontline, we can categorically say that time is now.
By the health secretary’s own admission we could soon see 100,000 cases a day and we now have the same number of weekly covid deaths as we had during March, when the country was in lockdown. It is therefore incredibly concerning that he is not willing to take immediate action to save lives and to protect the NHS.
It is wilfully negligent of the Westminster government not to be taking any further action to reduce the spread of infection, such as mandatory mask wearing, physical distancing and ventilation requirements in high-risk settings, particularly indoor crowded spaces. These are measures that are the norm in many other nations.”
(The British Medical Association Council)
It’s a damning statement. So what do you do when the advice from experts says one thing but the government says another? It’s a tough call for companies in dire need of a level of certainty. Here in the UK things are, if anything, less certain than ever. And it’s worrying to see that, around the globe, some massive ‘class action’ covid legal cases are being brought against companies and governments.
Here’s the latest news about the growing gap between what the UK’s doctors and scientists are saying, and what the government is planning.
UK PM accused of being ‘wilfully negligent’
The Prime Minister has rejected calls to re-impose covid safety measures even though the new daily case number exceeded 50K last week. Johnson says he is “sticking with our plan” but at the same time the leader of the nation’s doctors’ union says he is being ‘wilfully negligent’.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the public must have their vaccines and booster shots and wear masks in crowded places in order to avoid the new case rate hitting 100,000 a day. But he refused to implement the so-called ‘plan B’ contingency measure, which includes insisting on face coverings in some settings, mandatory vaccine-only status certificates, and a return to working from home.
At the same time the government has launched a media campaign to encourage eligible people to come forward for their booster jabs five months after their second dose, instead of six months afterwards, prompting some experts say that early jabs are a waste of resources.
We have concerns around new descendants of very infectious variants, too. The UK government says it is keeping a “close eye” on a descendant of the delta variant being seen in more cases than ever before. The variant is called AY4.2 and science doesn’t know much about it yet. So far the government says there’s no evidence it spreads more easily than delta. Scientists say AY4.2 has two mutations in its spike protein, both of which have been spotted in other coronavirus ‘lineages’ since the start of the pandemic, but until now they appeared at ‘low frequency’.
Covid legal action ’exploding’ – Is it better to be safe than sorry?
“In this unparalleled environment, the risk to companies of global and cross-border class action and collective redress proceedings is greatly increased.”
So says one UK law firm, and they’re not alone.
A fast-growing number of people across the world are already enacting fast-growing class action and legal redress procedures, especially around consumer legal claims. In fact lawyers and litigation funders are already kicking off covid-led litigation in the UK, Europe, Australia, the US, and Canada. The US has already seen hundreds of covid class actions. Increasing numbers are being filed in Canada. Over the next few months experts fully expect covid class action legal action to boom in Australia and the UK in particular, along with Germany, China, and elsewhere.
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