Web site logo c. 123-mcc.com

 Angus and Rosemary's Miscellany

  of Malvern - Other Resources



World logoBlogs >

Coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic weekly update for Malvern Seniors

Click to read our observations on politics and world events

18th December 2022

The next update will likely be on 8th January 2023

Triangular arrowLIFE RETURNS TO NORMAL, COVID JUST ANOTHER VIRUS

Incidence of all respiratory conditions rising due to cold weather

Preamble

For nearly three years we have been keeping an eye on the published government figures and monitoring the media to asses the likely level of risk for Seniors in the Malvern Hills district and providing links to where further information could be found.

During the epidemic Public Health England was split into the UK Health Security Agency and Office for Health Improvements and Disparities. However for simplicity, in this blog, we have continued to refer to this as PHE data.

Testing was run down many months ago and the public can no longer record the result of Lateral Flow tests so those daily cases reported on the Coronavirus Dashboard greatly underestimate the actual situation.

The chief remaining sources of data indicating direction of travel are:

  • The ONS infection survey (all nations of UK);

  • The Zoe Health Study;

  • Registered deaths in England and Wales reported by ONS;

  • Hospital deaths reported by NHS England, and;

  • Hospital admissions and bed occupancy reported by NHS England.

We'll carry on with our blog for a little while longer as the epidemic passes and life returns to normal.

As sections become no longer relevant we have been deleting them, but you can always refer back to archived pages.

This page will continue to be updated weekly nominally with Sunday's date.

Contents

Summary

What happens if you get sick

Booster shots

Vaccination Sites

Number of cases

Number of deaths

Healthcare numbers

Forecast for the week ahead

Longer term outlook

Advice for seniors

Annex/commentary

Summary of links

Bibliography

Menu of archived pages

Summary

The daily number of cases of COVID-19 has begun accelerating indicating the upside of the UK Winter Wave.

It's possible cases will continue rising throughout December and early January but for the majority COVID is unlikely to represent a critical threat to health.

In Worcestershire relatively few people are being admitted to hospital with severe illness and typically no more than a handful a week are dying in a population of approximately 600,000.

COVID-19 has become endemic in the UK; that is it can be regularly found in the community, and is just another of many viruses circulating against which the majority of the population has built up significant immunity.

Winter Wave

The latest University College London modelling suggests  cases  will rise in December possibly reaching a maximum little higher than the Autumn wave in late January 2023. Should that come about, weekly UK deaths might rise towards 700 during January which may seem a lot but is nothing for most people to be concerned about.

The Winter Wave is very unlikely to restrict the celebrations of healthy individuals this Christmas, but will (briefly) push weekly COVID deaths up a bit in the New Year.

Extremely vulnerable individuals should consider taking advice from a competent person about how cautious to be.

Crisis in the NHS

The rise in cases, while being of little interest to most people, will be of greater concern to hospital managers and the NHS; and for that reason we should take reasonable steps to slow the spread of COVID-19 during the festive season.

We think it very likely the Winter Wave of COVID-19 could push NHS England COVID Bed Occupancy up towards 12,000 in January, which together with rising hospitalizations due to Influenza, an estimated 13,000 patients awaiting discharge but unable to be sent home, and strikes by nurses, may put enormous pressure on the NHS during the next quarter.

These factors will likely result in some patients failing to get timely treatment and Excess Deaths, several times those currently due to COVID, could be reported by the ONS in future months.

What happens if you get sick with COVID

If you are feeling poorly there is now a fair chance it won't be COVID but some other winter respiratory illness; according to the Zoe Health Study only 30% or so of respiratory infections are currently COVID related.

If you have a stash of Lateral Flow Tests you can test yourself at home. However be aware that a negative test does not guarantee you don't have COVID. Whatever the virus best stay away from other people until you feel better.

Do not be surprised if you catch COVID because prevalence is still high and vaccination, while protecting from severe illness, has rarely in the past prevented infection.

Some may either show no symptoms or have a mild fever, sore throat, general aches and pains, and quickly get over it; while others could feel quite poorly and spend between two and five days in bed, with it taking five to ten days or so to recover.

Some of those who have caught COVID report either getting easily tired or suffering from shortness of breath for some weeks afterwards; if so patients are advised to take it easy until fully recovered.

A small number of patients report debilitating symptoms for months after so-called recovery. For example see Dez Medinger and Danny Altmann's book The Long COVID Handbook in bibliography.

Precautions

Nowadays few people seem to be taking precautions - for many months that has been a personal decision.

Click to view our advice

The bookmark below will take you  to the Worcestershire County Council webpage links at the end - there is little new to see.

Click for Worcestershire Dashboard and associated links

Booster shots

An Autumn booster jab is being offered to all those aged 50+ years and patients designated Clinically Extremely Vulnerable, such as with a severely weakened immune system.

Note: you should not book if it is less than 3 months since your last vaccination or you have had COVID within the last 2 weeks.

Seniors are advised to get both the COVID booster and flu jabs in order to reduce the likelyhood of severe illness and hospitalization. The NHS advises it is safe to have both jabs at the same time, but to minimise side effects you might want to consider having them a week apart.

Independent SAGE say Autumn Booster take-up in England is >90% in  those aged 75+ years, 83% in those aged 65 - 74, but only 56% in those aged 50 - 64 years.

Lately there seems to have been no government push to get more of the over 50s boosted and vaccination has come to a standstill.

Either the NHS or your GP Surgery (or both) should contact you when it is your turn to book; either by email, text message or letter. You should not need to contact them.

The arrangements for getting vaccinated have changed slightly with the rollout of Autumn boosters.

According to SW Healthcare, representing GP Surgeries, the centre at the Three Counties Showground has closed and vaccinations will either be at GP Surgeries, or at walk-in 'Pop-Up' Clinics, else roving 'Vaccine Vans' which are otherwise known as 'Jab-Vans'.

That is not the complete picture as some pharmacies such as Claremont House in Barnards Green and Evans in Malvern Link may be offering walk-in and timed appointments.

To book an Autumn Booster on-line:-

Click for NHS National Booking Service

Note: you may sometimes have to travel out of town to get an Autumn booster appointment, depending on vaccine availability.

Alternatively you can wait to be contacted by your GP Surgery and in due course get your Flu vaccine at the same time.

Don't forget to check the mobile phone you have registered with your GP surgery for text messages.

If you think you have been forgotten or don't have a mobile phone, phone your GP surgery to book an appointment.

Our email from the NHS included a link for finding walk-in centres:

Click this NHS link to find a walk-in coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination site

Depending on availability you could be offered either of the original Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, or the new Pfizer and Moderna bivalent vaccines which protect against both the original Wuhan strain and Omicron BA.1.

The SW Healthcare website explains the Worcestershire arrangements that are gradually being put in place by GPs in conjunction with NHS Herefordshire and Worcestershire.

Click for SW Healthcare information about where to get your vaccination in Worcestershire

Hint: click Vaccine Rollout on the navigation bar at the top of the page and then Vaccine Van for pop-ups.

In summary, if you want to get your Autumn booster you can either book an on-line appointment, possibly having to travel out of town, look for a local walk-in centre such as Claremont House and Evans Pharmacies, look for a pop-up, or perhaps easiest contact your GP Surgery and book your flu jab at the same time.

Vaccination Sites

The NHS England website has a spreadsheet updated 5th October 2022 listing vaccination centres under the categories:

  • Pharmacies

  • GP led vaccination services

  • Vaccination centres

  • Hospital Hubs

Note: this does not mention plans for pop-ups or vaccination-vans.

Click for NHS England Vaccination Sites

Two pharmacies in Malvern are listed Evans in Malvern Link, and Claremont House in Barnards Green.

Prospect View is the only GP Health centre listed in Malvern.

(No information listed for Whiteacres Medical Centre, Malvern Link; do tell us if you know)

 Upton Surgery is used by some residents of Malvern and surrounds.

The Malvern Showground remains listed as a Vaccination Centre despite SW Healthcare saying it has closed. If you know the situation there do please let us know.

No hospital hubs are listed for Worcestershire.

Note: for historical information about how to get vaccinated, which may be out of date, select an archived report eg

Go to 'How to Get Vaccinated' section of the 7th August 2022 blog

Orange triangleNumber of cases

There are now two sources reporting the prevalence of COVID-19 in the UK.

  • The ONS which conducts a weekly random survey by collecting nose and throat swabs from the public for PCR tests, and analysis for variants.

  • The ZOE Health Study, whereby participating members of the public log their symptoms, tests and vaccines.

PHE data, gathered from PCR testing, is mostly now in hospitals. Hospitals have stopped surveillance and are only testing patients showing symptoms.

Now the government has declared the pandemic over, PHE no longer offers nationwide testing.

ONS infection survey

ONS estimates that 1,095,100  people in England tested positive for COVID-19 in the week ending 5th December 2022; a rise of 16% on last week.

Click for latest Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey, UK

Date report published Prevalence (England) Ratio of people with COVID
14th October 2022 1,513,700 1:35
21st October 2022 1,706,200 1:30
28th October 2022 1,748,400 1:30
4th November 2022 1,593,900 1:35
11th November 2022 1,323,200 1:40
18th November 2022 940,700 1:60
25th November 2022 809,200 1:65
2nd December 2022 873,200 1:60
9th December 2022 941,700 1:60
16th December 2022 1,095,100 1:50

Prevalence of COVID-19 in England estimated by ONS

Prevalence is estimated 1:55 in Wales; 1:50 in Scotland; and 1:45 in Northern Ireland.

One must remember these estimates are almost two weeks behind real time, and prevalence may have risen further; also note prevalence varies widely between regions and age groups.

Prevalence is highest in London, NW, E and SW; and in the age group 25-49 years.

Zoe Health Study

The ZOE Health Study estimates are shown in the following table.

Date of screenshot Prevalence (UK) Estimated new infections per day
13th October 2022 3,014,668 235,829
20th October 2022 3,075,997 203,224
28th October 2022 2,778,154 178,336
3rd November 2022 2,578,788 166,791
10th November 2022 2,319,282 147,512
17th November 2022 2,136,987 145,719
24th November 2022 2,088,406 148,331
1st December 2022 2,079,518 147,525
8th December 2022 2,156,915 173,889
15th December 2022 2,524,929 219,131

Prevalence of COVID-19 in UK estimated by the Zoe Health Study

According to the more recent Zoe figures, estimated prevalence has risen by 17% and daily cases by 26% during the last week; the direction of travel is confirmed by figures for Hospital bed occupancy rising.

Directional arrowNumber of deaths

Statistics on COVID deaths are published by Public Health England, The Office of National Statistics, and NHS England. These can't be directly compared as  they cover different periods, but together the figures paint a picture of the direction of travel - which is that the death rate has reached a plateau after which the weekly death rate can be expected to increase slowly due to the rising Winter Wave.

PHE figures

The Dashboard chart of COVID (28) deaths, following a positive test, by date of death shows that the 7 day average peaked in England at about 148 on 19th October, then gradually falling, and levelling off at about 60 deaths per day during 10 days proceeding 5th December.

Click to view the UK government Coronavirus Dashboard

ONS figures

The Office of National Statistics (ONS) reports registered deaths in England and Wales where COVID-19 is mentioned somewhere on the death certificate. The ONS figures lag real time by 10 - 14 days due to the administrative delay in submitting and processing reports, and do not include Northern Ireland and Scotland.

Note: the figures include cases where COVID may have been a secondary cause of death.

Click for ONS data on deaths (Excel spreadsheet)

The ONS figures are broken down by Local Authority providing a glimpse of where deaths are occurring. The provisional cumulative total of COVID related deaths in Worcestershire reported by the ONS up to 2nd December (week 48 of 2022) is shown below.

Note: the numbers are now derived from  Table 1 of the ONS Death Registrations spreadsheet using the in-built filters. This gives the provisional total of deaths registered in any week, which can be distorted by delayed reporting, for example, due to public holidays.

Deaths by Welsh Health Boards are excluded to avoid duplication as these are totals of Local authorities.

Death occurrences by 'date of death' is the most accurate metric but takes longer to be confirmed.

Districts of
Worcs
Deaths
2020
Deaths
2021
Deaths
2022
Week 48 Population
Bromsgrove 164 142 59 1 98,529
Malvern Hills 61 98 70 0 77,545
Redditch 108 109 45 0 85,317
Worcester 87 134 49 0 103,542
Wychavon 157 154 81 0 126,240
Wyre Forest 171 132 61 0 100,957
TOTAL 748 769 365 0 592,130

Provisional cumulative COVID-19 deaths in Worcestershire registered by ONS to 2nd December 2022.

Only one death in hospital in Bromsgrove was recorded, compared to no deaths the previous week.

In England and Wales 316 COVID-19 related deaths were reported in the week to 2nd December, 32 less than the week before and a fall of 9%. Of these 43 were in care homes, 23 at home, 14 in a hospice, 234 in hospital and 2 elsewhere.

So far this year in England and Wales 31,527 people have died with COVID mentioned on their death certificate.

Chart of ONS deaths

ONS provisional deaths 'by week reported' in England and Wales 2022

You will see from the chart that this year deaths have presented as a series of waves each lower than the one before.

If the amplitude of the Winter Wave is less than the one before we should see no more than 700 deaths per week; and if the periodicity is maintained the peak of the Winter Wave could come in early to mid February 2023.

The figures on the Coronavirus Dashboard of ONS deaths by date on the death certificate show ONS England deaths rose to 95 on 14th October, but since fallen and levelled off at about 46 deaths per day between 11th and  18th November 2022.

In comparison averaged over recent years roughly 1,700 people die daily from all causes in the UK, so current COVID deaths represent 3%.

Click for ONS Coronavirus (COVID-19) latest insights: Deaths

NHS England figures

Daily COVID hospital deaths in England  have hovered around 40 during the last week.

NHS England figures for Worcestershire

The table below shows the latest COVID deaths in Worcestershire hospitals reported by NHS England on 15th December 2022.

Worcestershire Cumulative deaths Past week
Acute hospitals 1,202 2
Care hospitals 90 0
TOTAL 1,292 2

Excludes deaths in care homes, deaths at home and deaths in hospices.

Click for NHS COVID-19 total announced deaths

Look for COVID Total announced deaths file, then select tab Deaths by Trust.

Note: NHS say all deaths are recorded against the date of death rather than the date the deaths were announced. As from 1st July 2022 reporting has moved to publication once per week on a Thursday, rather than every weekday.

Trend in Worcestershire COVID deaths this year (overview)

Since 1st January 2022 there has been a baseline level of up to 1 COVID death per day in NHS Worcester acute hospitals.

A peak of typically up to 3 deaths per day occurred either side of 1st April, with a more recent upturn of up to 2 deaths per day during July 2022. On some days no deaths were reported.

With a Worcestershire population of roughly 600,000 and assuming one COVID death per day that equates to 0.06% COVID deaths per year. Taking into account that most deaths are of the elderly the risk of Seniors dying of COVID this year will probably be far less than 0.5%.

Worcestershire represents about 1% of the population of England, so all other factors being equal, one might expect the Worcestershire death rate to be one hundredth of the figure for England.

COVID deaths in England are now no more than  about 400 per week, so for Worcestershire assume a pro rata average of fewer than 5 deaths per week.

To get things in perspective, at the present time, Seniors are 20 to 30 times more likely to die of something else, for example cancer, heart attack, stroke, and old age.

For that reason most people are now taking the view that COVID is no longer a critical threat to their health.

Risk of COVID-19 death by age band

NHS England provides an analysis of COVID-19 deaths in hospital in England and Wales by age band. Shown below is a snapshot of 2,898 recent deaths for the period 6th May 2022 to 6th July 2022 when most of these deaths will have been from the Omicron variants.

Age band Number of COVID deaths % of deaths
0 - 19 8 0.3
20 - 39 25 0.9
40 - 59 165 5.7
60 - 79 1,010 34.9
80+ 1,692 58.4

Relative risk of COVID-19 death by age band May - July 2022

The main point to note is those aged 60+ still account for 93% of deaths despite young people being more likely to catch COVID-19.

The risk profile for Omicron appears to be the same as for Delta. Age is still the greatest risk factor; perhaps reflecting that older people have more health problems.

According to the Coronavirus Dashboard sex is an additional risk factor - males are roughly 50% more likely to die than women.

triangleHealthcare numbers

The UK government Coronavirus Dashboard includes information about healthcare statistics and NHS bed occupancy.

Hospital COVID cases (England) Number Change in last week
Patients currently in hospital 6,720 +1,219
Patients on ventilation 150 +31
Patients admitted daily 750 +163

Headline summary of patients in hospital reported on 15th December 2022

Note: 'Patients admitted daily' is the weekly total divided by 7. This number includes both patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 from the community, and those diagnosed with COVID-19 in hospital.

Bed occupancy has risen by about 22% and daily admissions by 27% during the last week.

According to Independent SAGE, hospital admissions mostly comprise those aged 65+years, and admissions are rising fastest in the SW.

See charts on the Coronavirus Dashboard and below.

Bed numbers by region in England

Tabulated figures for COVID bed occupancy in England can be found on the NHS England website providing another indicator of the prevalence of COVID.

Click for NHS England COVID-19 Hospital bed Activity statistics

Note: see the latest Daily Admissions and Beds spreadsheets, then look for all COVID beds.

Region 7th December 2022 14th December 2022 15th January 2021
England 5,501 6,720 33,362
London 915 1,026 7,811
Midlands 1,001 1,250 5,890

Comparison of All beds COVID data for England, London and Midlands

In the last week the number of COVID-19 General and Acute beds rose by 22% in England, 12% in London and 25% in the Midlands.

For comparison, the number of beds occupied during the peak of the epidemic in January 2021 is shown in red in the right hand column of the table.

The chart below shows how COVID bed occupancy due to the Autumn Wave peaked in England about 16th October 2022 and had been falling until two weeks ago since when there has been an accelerating upturn likely heralding a Winter Wave.

Note: the peak in beds is usually one week delayed on the peak in daily admissions, and deaths roughly lag beds by a further week.

COVID beds

COVID bed occupancy in England from 1st October to 14th December 2022

Green triangleWorcestershire hospital beds

Between 6 December 2022 and 12 December 2022, 56 patients went into hospital with coronavirus. This shows an increase of 166% compared to the previous 7 days. There were 61 patients in hospital with coronavirus on 14 December 2022. That is 21 more than the week before; one on a ventilator.

Click for Summary of Malvern numbers on the Coronavirus dashboard

This link also reports deaths.

Deaths in Malvern Hills

Between 4 December 2022 and 10 December 2022, there were no deaths within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test.

Forecast for the week ahead

We expect about 300 COVID related deaths to be registered in England and Wales in week 49 ending 9th December, to be reported by the ONS on 20th December.

In the county of Worcestershire, based on 56 new hospital cases last week and assuming the ratio of all deaths (including those in care homes and at home) to be 1:11 of admissions, then there should be no more than 5 COVID deaths per week in early January 2023.

NHS COVID bed occupancy in England could rise by 20% next week.

Longer term outlook (up to the end of January 2023)

Hospital bed occupancy has begun rising quite steeply indicating the start of a Winter Wave of COVID-19.

We expect COVID cases to continue rising as a result of the Football World Cup and due to increased travel and mingling of friends, families, office colleagues, and shoppers during December, and New Year.

It's possible this Winter Wave may turn out no larger than the Autumn wave and, were that so, there is little to be concerned about.

Given that COVID hospital bed occupancy peaked at 10,608 beds in England, had fallen to 4,600 and is now 6,720 it's likely that the ONS death rate will fall to about 300 and then rise to about 450 deaths per week in England and Wales during the next fortnight or so; thereafter the death rate could continue to climb until the end of January.

If it is assumed hospital bed occupancy rises linearly for 4 weeks at the present 1,200 beds per week, bed occupancy could approach 12,000 by the middle of January and if the death rate rises proportionally, the death rate could rise towards 790 deaths per week in England and Wales by the end of January.

Though significant, that's not a level for the majority to be concerned about, and it could turn out that the death rate is actually lower due to Autumn Boosters.

UCL modelling

The latest UCL projection is that the 7-day average of daily (certified) deaths per day may rise slowly, peaking in early February at around 100 per day or 700 deaths per week, which roughly equates to our 'back of the envelope' calculation.

Click for UCL Long-term forecasting of the COVID-19 epidemic

NHS COVID Beds

If our and the UCL projections are near the mark, the number of NHS hospital beds occupied by COVID patients in England could start rising from 6,720 towards 12,000 beds this winter adding to the pressure on the NHS.

According to Independent SAGE currently only about 30% of COVID beds are occupied by patients admitted with severe COVID related illness, while the remainder are patients who catch COVID while in hospital.

It's possible, now that the winter pressure on hospitals is increasing, it is becoming increasingly difficult to isolate COVID patients.

Additional deaths due to the Winter Wave

Things don't look too bad. Prior to New Year the UK COVID-19 death rate looks set to remain below 700 deaths per week. It has been our opinion that as long as the COVID death rate remained below that number neither the public nor the government would be concerned. This threshold now looks unlikely to be exceeded during the remainder of 2022, but could be slightly topped in January and February 2023.

We doubt many will be concerned by a 'blip'  - possibly of the order of 5,000 additional UK COVID deaths amongst OAPs this winter. Flu and Excess Deaths (above the normal average) will likely turn much greater than any COVID deaths.

To put things in perspective, Worcestershire's share might only be of the order of 50 COVID related deaths.

In a population of 600,000 few will be concerned about that as, barring new variants of concern, the vast majority (we estimate 99.99%) can be expected to survive any winter bout of COVID-19.

Advice for SeniorsCOVID risk high

We judge the risk of exposure to COVID-19 is once again HIGH in England, but remember there are other respiratory viruses circulating that could make you feel just as sick.

See our riskometer opposite.

Many, perhaps most, healthy people are taking the view that COVID is no longer a critical threat to their health.

For the more cautious the simple safeguards are to:

  • make sure your COVID and FLU vaccinations are fully up to date

  • wash your HANDS thoroughly, using soap and hot water, for 20 seconds, including after handling deliveries to your home, to kill virus picked up from contaminated surfaces (see note 1);

  • ideally wear either a well fitting FACE covering,  or better an FFP2 face mask when in crowded settings for example when in shops, theatres, health-care settings, and when using public transport;

  • SPACE at least 2 metres from people you don't feel safe with (see note 2);

  • preferably socialise with friends and other households outdoors in the FRESH AIR else, if you are indoors, either ventilate by keeping windows open as far as is practicable or consider putting a HEPA air purifier in the room;

  • avoid crowded indoor settings;

  • avoid friends and colleagues with cold and flu like symptoms;

  • ideally self-isolate to protect others if you feel unwell with cold or flu like symptoms; according to the Zoe COVID Study the current top five COVID symptoms are sore throat, runny nose, blocked nose, headache and cough, which may be difficult to distinguish from a common cold; other symptoms may include sneezing, tiredness and muscle aches and pains.

  • respect others and give them space;

 Notes:

1) Wash your hands thoroughly before touching your face to avoid transferring virus from contaminated surfaces to your mouth, eyes and nose. If outdoors, wash hands with an alcohol based hand gel.

2) Two metres is further than you think - roughly an arm and a walking stick away.

3) If you are 'clinically vulnerable' consult your GP or specialist; you may need to take a test and consider anti viral drugs if testing positive.

4) However careful you are, don't be too surprised if you catch COVID as the Omicron variants are highly infectious and the Wuhan vaccines give little protection against transmission and infection (although they do reduce the severity of symptoms). No information yet on the efficacy of the new bivalent vaccines.

5) You may still have to take a test and wear a facemask when travelling to some overseas countries.

Annex

Commentary

Cases of COVID have begun rising quite steeply indicating the UK is on the upside of the expected Winter Wave.

It's possible the amplitude of the Winter Wave will be roughly that of the Autumn Wave in which case the number of weekly deaths during January 2023 is unlikely to exceed 800, which compared to the worst days of the pandemic is nothing to be overly concerned about.

The last update of the Coronavirus Dashboard during 2022 will be on 22nd December and ONS and NHS reporting will be interrupted over Christmas and the New Year, so our next update will likely be on 8th January 2023.

In the meantime we wish all our readers Peace and Joy at Christmas; please say a prayer for those in Ukraine.

COVID video updates

Links to updates by Professor Tim Spector of the Zoe Health Study, Independent SAGE  and sometimes pundit Dr John Campbell can be found here:-

Click to watch Zoe Health Study fortnightly update on 15th December 2022

Tim discusses the increase in COVID along with high rates of cold-like illness, and brings you some fascinating insights from the Intermittent Fasting Study on how snacking has changed for people during their fasting days.

Click to watch Independent SAGE weekly update on 16th December 2022

Join Independent SAGE on the last Q and A for the year, plus End of Year Statement to be presented by Prof Stephen Reicher, Prof Anthony Costello chairing, and Prof Christina Pagel on numbers.

Lateral Flow test work better if swab taken from both nose and throat. Possibly take a swab from the inside of the lips if throat hard to reach (see video for advice).

It was suggested about 6% of symptomatic patients suffer from Long COVID and roughly 1M people have had Long COVID for more than a year.

Christmas message:

Be kind

Considerate

Be careful

Five point plan for Christmas:

  1. Get vaccinated

  2. When ill, stay at home

  3. Take a test (especially if visiting elderly or vulnerable people

  4. Ventilate rooms

  5. Wear a mask in stuffy crowded situations (eg public transport)

The next update from Independent SAGE is planned for 13th January 2023

List of vaccines

Autumn bivalent boosters

A second bivalent vaccine has been approved 3rd September 2022 as a booster by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) after it was found to meet the UK regulator’s standards of safety, quality and effectiveness. The updated booster vaccine made by Pfizer/BioNTech, targeting the Wuhan virus and Omicron BA.1 variant, has been approved for use in individuals aged 12 years and above.

An updated version of the COVID-19 vaccine made by Moderna that targets two coronavirus variants (known as a bivalent vaccine) has been approved for adult booster doses by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) after it was found to meet the UK regulator’s standards of safety, quality and effectiveness.

Click for government press release - First bivalent COVID-19 booster vaccine approved by UK medicines regulator

The earlier vaccine story

Here is the updated list of COVID-19 vaccines ordered by the UK. It looks as though the government has settled on the use of Pfizer and Moderna with Astrazeneca now held in reserve.

Moderna has been offered for Spring Boosters at the Three Counties Showground.

The order for Valneva has been cancelled, but nevertheless it has now been approved for use by MHRA.

Click for BBC report - Valneva Covid vaccine approved for use in UK

 Nuvaxoid (Novavax) was approved in February.

 The government has signed deals to buy 114 million additional doses of the Pfizer (54M) and Moderna (60M) vaccines to use in 2022 and 2023.

Click for press announcement - Government agrees new deals to future proof vaccine rollout in light of new variant

The press announcement goes on to say that 60M doses of Novavax vaccine are expected to be delivered in 2022 and 7.5M doses of GSK/Sanofi, so there seems no intention to cancel these late arrivals.

Click for Guardian report - Novavax expected to be become fourth Covid vaccine available in UK

COVID-19 vaccine Doses ordered (million) Status
Pfizer BioNTech, two dose, -70 deg C 40+60+35 Approved, deliveries continuing, made in Belgium (EU). An additional 60M doses have been ordered for booster shots for the most vulnerable in the autumn. A further 35M doses were ordered in August 2021 for delivery in 2022.
Astrazeneca, two dose, fridge 100 Approved for those aged 30+ years; deliveries continuing. Batches made in UK, Belgium and India.
Moderna, two dose, -20 deg C 7+10 Approved. First deliveries to Wales and Scotland 7th April 2021 then England 13th April; mainly for those aged under 50 years awaiting vaccination.
Valneva, two dose 60+40
order
cancelled
A jab from French company Valneva will be made in Livingston, West Lothian, Scotland. Order cancelled September 2021. Delivery had been expected to start in second half of 2021.

Approved by MHRA April 2022.
Janssen, single dose 20 Approved, a jab from Belgian firm Janssen, owned by Johnson and Johnson; UK approval 28th May. Order reduced from 30 to 20M.
Nuvaxovid 60 A jab manufactured by US firm Novavax being made in Stockton-on-Tees UK. Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK) contracted to fill and package vials. Approved by MHRA 3rd Feb 2022. JCVI to advise how vaccine will be used.
GSK Sanofi 60 Some delay due to adjusting the formula to give better protection to the elderly; expected approval and delivery of 7.5M doses in 2022.
Curevac 50 ? Contract placed with German company Feb 2021. Possible source of new variant vaccine; disappointing trial results have resulted in the company working on a second generation vaccine. Future uncertain.

Table of vaccines ordered by the UK government

 

Some of this information is now out of date but provides a historical context to the epidemic.

Information about Coronavirus can be found on the NHS website:

https://www.nhs.uk/coronavirus

 

Symptoms

About COVID symptoms

Note: the list of symptoms was updated on 1st April 2022

Article about the effects of Wuhan Coronavirus on the human body

 

Reporting and how to obtain a test

How to get a test

https://www.nhs.uk/coronavirus

About joining the Zoe COVID Symptom Study:

 https://covid19.joinzoe.com

 

Guidance

UK government Coronavirus guidance

See also - government sets out next steps for living with COVID

COVID-19 Response: Autumn and Winter Plan 2021 for England

UK Health and Security Agency (UKHSA) website

 

COVID Alert states

Guidance on UK COVID-19 alert level methodology: an overview

COVID-19 Alert Level lowered to 3 on 10th May 2021

 

Tiers

Guidance on tiers: what you need to know

Government postcode checker to find tier for other areas

 

Statistics

UK government COVID-19: Omicron daily overview

UK government Coronavirus Dashboard

Coronavirus Dashboard Interactive Map

ONS data on deaths in England and Wales (Excel spreadsheet)

NHS England COVID-19 Daily Deaths

NHS England COVID-19 Hospital Admissions

NHS England vaccination statistics

Reports on COVID intensive care beds - see intensive care national audit and research centre (ICNARC) website

Worcestershire Coronavirus Dashboard

Worcestershire COVID-19 Vaccinations Dashboard

 

HSA COVID-19 vaccine weekly surveillance reports

Information about NHS hospital bed numbers: past, present, future

 

A glimpse of the worldwide vaccination situation can be found on the Our World in Data website.

Click for chart showing % vaccinated

 

A video with Dr John Campbell and mathematician Professor Fenton explaining the various ways in which RISK can be specified.

Risks and benefits with Professor Fenton

 

Modelling

A forecast of the progression of the COVID-19 epidemic can be found on a University College London (UCL) website.

Click for UCL Long-term forecasting of the COVID-19 epidemic

A projection of the future COVID-19 death toll and daily deaths can be found on The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation website. 

Click for IHME projection of COVID-19 deaths

 

Reports

Coronavirus (COVID-19) latest insights by ONS

A live roundup of the latest data and trends about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic from the ONS and other sources.

https://www.medrxiv.org/

MedRxiv is a US preprint server for Health Sciences. A depository for reports which have still to be peer reviewed.

COVID-19 rapid guideline: managing the long-term effects of COVID-19

NICE guidance on managing Long COVID

 

The bigger picture

Worldometer summary of coronavirus cases worldwide

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control info

https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/geographical-distribution-2019-ncov-cases

World Health Organisation info

https://covid19.who.int/

 

Window on the USA

Centre for Disease Control (CDC)

CDC COVID Data Tracker

Find maps and charts tracking cases, deaths, and trends of COVID-19 in the United States.

American Association of Retired People (AARP)

 

Worcestershire

A local summary of COVID data can be found on the Worcestershire Coronavirus Dashboard.

Note 1: use the arrow <> buttons at the bottom of the Dashboard screen to move between pages.

Note 2: the figures for COVID cases are becoming meaningless as testing is run down.

Note 3:  deaths are on page 7, and hospital beds on page 9.

Click for Worcestershire County Council COVID-19 news

There is a colourful webpage offering advice on learning to live with COVID for those aged under 30 years. 'Rona' is slang for Coronavirus.

Click for The Worcestershire 'Rona' Hub

COVID Outbreak Control Plan

Click for Simple Summary of Malvern numbers on the Coronavirus dashboard

 

Miscellaneous

Spanish Flu

Dr Jeff Kildea's commentary about the 1919 outbreak of Spanish Flu in Australia

 

Views of Martin McKee, Professor of European Public Health

Follow Martin McKee on Twitter

Views of Prof Christina Pagel, a member of Independent SAGE

Follow Christina Pagel on Twitter

 

SAGE membership

Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE)

 

Scottish government:

Link to Scottish Government website

Link to Postcode checker for COVID restrictions by protection level in areas of Scotland

 

Welsh Government:

Guidance on COVID alert levels in Wales

 

Bibliography

Woolhouse, Professor Mark, The Year the World went Mad, published 2022 by Sandstone Press Ltd, ISBN: 978-1-913207-94-3

Medinger Dez, Altmann Danny, The Long Covid Handbook, Penguin Books, 2022. Kindle version available.

 

The Malvern Hills logo

Back to top

The interpretations and opinions expressed are our own