Boris Johnson prepares an advertising crusade to tell parents about Covid’s symptoms

The prime minister is making plans for an advertising crusade to inform teachers and parents of the symptoms of coronavirus, it has been revealed.

The government has faced serious negative reactions to the control and traceability system, which has noticed that those who want to control send many kilometers and tell them to sign up for long queues at some control centers while others remain empty.

While Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has Health Secretary Matt Hancock to apologize for what happened, Hancock told Sophy Ridge in Sky News that he would not.

He said, “No, I strongly and firmly my team that has done an incredible task in capacity building. “

As the controversy over checks continues, the government’s advertising crusade hopes to prevent students with nasal dripping and colds from being sent home and reviewed.

According to the Times, Boris Johnson’s aides are running on the public data crusade to prevent the formula from being overwhelmed.

The newspaper also states that rationing plans for coronavirus in England will give priority to teachers.

Boris Johnson’s assistants are preparing an advertising crusade for teachers and parents and informing them of Covid’s symptoms to overload the verification system.

Chaos has been attributed to a “crazy” fever from parents who unnecessarily seek Covid evidence for young people with colds.

Coughs and colds usually accumulate every September when young people return to school, and become even more common in the winter.

But a 10th source told Mail on Sunday that the increase in the call for evidence was partly due to other people “not understanding when and did not take a test. “

The source said: “For example, total categories of youth and their families were sent for after a positive case, which is crazy.

“Many children sniff in the fall; the difference now is that everyone is out of school and looking to take the crown tests. “

Public fitness experts echoed the feelings. Linda Bauld, a professor of public fitness at the University of Edinburgh, said the same tendency to over-test in Scotland, where schools returned about a fortnight earlier than those in the south of the border.

“It is clear from the Scottish example that many unnecessary tests were carried out through parents for their children and the same thing happened in England and Wales,” he told mail on Sunday.

Dido Harding, head of NHS Test and Trace, told MPs that there had been a “very strong increase in the number of young people examined, a doubling of young people under the age of 17 examined,” with even greater increases between five and nine years .

A graph of how parents can differentiate between a cold, a flu and a coronavirus

According to some reports, more than three hundred schools had sent some or all of the schoolchildren home after the reported or suspected cases last week.

The Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health advises the ability to control young people with undeniable bloodless symptoms, such as nasal discharge or fever-free sore throat.

NAHT, the principals’ union, has published information on how exam accumulation affects schools.

The study shows that 4 out of five schools have children who are isolated because they cannot take a covid test.

The union collected knowledge from 736 schools and found that 82% of schools lately had young people who did not attend because they simply did not have a check to exclude covid-19.

Meanwhile, 87% have young people who have been attending lately because they are waiting for the results of their checks.

The guild also found that 45% of schools lately have that they are not painting because they cannot access a check to discard covid-19, and 60% have to stay at home lately because they are waiting for their check results.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT principals union, wrote to the prime minister last week with developing considerations about the effect of the lack of access to covid-19 testing in schools, warning that the scenario is increasingly disturbing and unsustainable Today’s figures add weight to these considerations.

Mr Whiteman said: “The Covid-19 test will need to be available to everyone so that students and staff who get a negative score can return to school quickly.

But we hear the same thing many times from our members across the country: chaos is due to the inability of and families to test themselves effectively when they show symptoms.

Eighth graders wear masks as a precautionary transmission of the new coronavirus as they walk down a moor end academy aisle in Huddersfield, Yorkshire

“This means that schools struggle to locate staff, that young people are absent from school, and in the end, youth education is unnecessarily interrupted.

“The government entrusted us that the tests would be in a position to reopen schools; this is one of your key protection needs that will be put in position to allow youth and teachers to re-enter.

“It is by no means unpredictable or unexpected that the call for covid-19 will accumulate when schools reopen more widely this period.

“And yet the formula is chaos. The government has let schools and young people down. “

“It is unacceptable for this to happen when schools have worked so hard to make their component well in the plan and students have already had to go through so much uncertainty and disruption.

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