UK plans tougher COVID rules as 131 more Omicron cases reported

London: Britain recorded 131 new cases of the Omicron COVID-19 variant on Wednesday, taking the total to 568, as it emerged that government ministers are in discussion about plans for tougher rules in an effort to slow the spread of the highly transmissible variant first detected in South Africa.

According to reports emerging from ministerial quarters, Prime Minister Boris Johnson may decide to move the country to the so-called 'Plan B' winter strategy of dealing with COVID-19  which would see people being directed to work from home, compulsory face masks in all settings and vaccine passports for entry to most venues.

The government has so far stopped short of enforcing Plan B and issued guidelines for compulsory face masks on transport and some indoor settings, such as shops.

In total, the UK recorded 51,342 new COVID cases in the last 24 hours on Wednesday and a further 161 people have died within 28 days of testing positive for the novel coronavirus.

It comes as the health service marked one year since its very first COVID-19 vaccine rollout, when 90-year-old Margaret Keenan received a Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at University Hospital in Coventry.

In light of the new Omicron variant and following advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), the government expanded its top-up booster dose programme to all adults over 18 and announced that all eligible people will be offered a top-up jab by the end of January, as well as halving the minimum gap between second doses and boosters to three months.

To speed up the vaccination programme, around 450 military personnel have been drafted in to support deployment, with extra community pharmacy sites, hospital hubs, and pop-up sites opening in convenient locations across the country.

NHS England has also launched a recruitment drive for 10,000 new vaccinators, administration staff, healthcare support workers and volunteers to join the national vaccination mission. The National Health Service (NHS) said almost 21 million boosters and third doses have been administered in the UK.

Everyone over the age of 40 who had their second dose at least three months ago will soon be able to book an appointment for their booster jab. Younger age groups will be invited by the NHS in order of age.

The NHS pointed to a recent real-world study on the effectiveness of booster vaccines against the dominant Delta variant by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), which shows top-up jabs boost protection back up to over 90 per cent against symptomatic COVID-19 in adults aged over 50 two weeks after being vaccinated

Tags: