Coronavirus UK News LIVE: Matt Hancock to deliver public speech on fitness when Leicester blockade rises TODAY

Speculation has fixed that Mr Hancock is eliminating Public Health England (PHE) after the agency’s control of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, Leicester’s local blockade is expected to be lifted seven weeks after starting, following an alarming build-up of Covid-19 cases.

Citizens are currently prohibited from gathering other people from other families in their homes and gardens.

Gyms and wedding ceremonies are prohibited for the citizens of the city.

But with the drop in cases, Secretary of Health Matt Hancock is expected to ease restrictions to the fullest.

The number of coronavirus deaths increased to 3 in the UK on Monday, with a total of 41369 deaths.

Follow our blog about coronavirus for the latest news and updates…

HANCOCK – ANNOUNCEMENT

“The world has experienced a pandemic of this magnitude in times of fashion.

“While we have some of the sciences of public fitness in the world, we have not entered this crisis with the ability to respond to a century-old event.

“To give us the most productive chance to defeat this virus, we want to take science and scale in combination into a coherent hole. That’s why I’m saying we’re forming a new organization, the National Institute for Health Protection.

“It will have an exclusive and relentless mission: to others of threats external to the fitness of this country.”

HANCOCK – ANNOUNCEMENT

The Secretary of Health gives a speech on policy exchange.

He said: “The coronavirus pandemic has softened our public fitness formula and we have learned a lot about the virus, what has worked, what you want to change.

“The settings I’m making today are fully designed for our response, to make sure the formula works to help you do your important job.

“We are replacing now because we want to do everything we can to do our daily jobs for the public and public fitness in the UK.”

OPENING IN LIGUE 1 DEFERRED

The opening of the French football league season, Ligue 1, has been postponed from Friday to September 16 or 17.

Three new cases of coronavirus have been shown in Olympique de Marseille, bringing the general to four of the club, and its opposite setting to Saint-Etienne may simply not occur.

LESS THAN A THIRD OF PEOPLE WHO TEST POSITIVE COVID SYMPTOMS, DATA SHEETS

Less than a third of other people who tested positive for coronavirus reported having symptoms, showed new figures.

Research through the Office of National Statistics found that only about 28% of other people who tested positive for Covid-19 reported symptoms at the time of their swab examination or at previous or subsequent controls.

The remaining 72% of the positive cases reported that they did not have any of the general or express symptoms on the day of their positive swab test, previous or subsequent swab tests, or answered any of the questions, the ONS added.

The results, published Tuesday, said there is a “potentially significant number” of asymptomatic cases of the virus.

‘YOUR IGNORANCE IS NOT A DEFENSE, MR. WILLIAMSON’

The education secretary questioned Sky News.

– Inzamam Rashid (@inzyrashid) 18 August 2020

CHARLES SENDS SUPPORT MESSAGE TO AUSTRALIANS AMID THE SECOND WAVE OF CORONAVIRUS

The Prince of Wales said Australians were doing “difficult things” by recording a message for others facing a coronavirus resurgence in Victoria.

Charles, a former king of the Commonwealth country, said the moment of the wave would have “heartbreaking consequences” for many, but that the state would be more powerful than ever.

“I just wanted to say, on behalf of my wife and me, that you’re so in our special mind that I can believe it’s an incredibly attractive and frustrating moment, and that we care deeply about what you want to do. He said.

Melbourne, the state capital, has been locked for more than a month, with strict measures in place, a curfew at night.

Victoria still has more than 7,000 Covid-19 assets and remains Australia’s worst concern.

COVID-19 LOSS OF ODOR ” MUCH DEEPER ‘ THAN COLD OR FLU

Scientists have found that the loss of odor related to Covid-19 infection is “much deeper” than a flu or severe exangé.

A team of researchers from across Europe, which added experts from the University of East Anglia, reports of loss of taste and smell from others with Covid-19 with those of other upper respiratory tract infections.

In the small test of 30 other people, they also found that, unlike colds or flu, others with Covid-19 find sour or sweet flavors.

MORE THAN 60,000 APPROVED CORONAVIRUS LOANS FOR UK COMPANIES

The government has more than 52 billion pounds of coronavirus assistance for British corporations affected by the pandemic.

Most of this money was provided through the Bounce Back loan program, which can provide small businesses with 100 percent government-guaranteed loans worth up to 50,000 euros.

According to the Latest Weekly Treasury update, 35.47 billion pounds will be paid to 1174,854 small businesses in the UK.

More than 60,000 larger corporations also obtained government-approved loans.

The Treasury said it had now approved 13.68 billion pounds of money for 60409 corporations through the coronavirus discontinuation loan program.

THE UK NOW HAS MORE THAN 57,000 CORONAVIRUS DEATHS

More than 57,000 Covid-19-related deaths have been reported in the UK.

Figures published on Tuesday through the ONS show that 51,935 Covid-19-related deaths occurred in England and Wales until 7 August and were recorded on 15 August.

Figures released last week through National Records for Scotland showed that 4213 Covid-1nine-related deaths had been recorded in Scotland as of 9 August, while 85nine deaths had occurred in Northern Ireland as of 7 August (and had been recorded as of 12 August), according to the Northern Ireland Research and Statistics Agency.

Together, these figures mean that to date, 57,007 deaths have been recorded in the UK, where Covid-19 has been discussed in the death certificate, suspicious cases.

GREATER DEPRESSION

The number of adults suffering from depression is higher in the coronavirus pandemic, the figures of the Office of National Statistics suggested.

ONS data showed that almost one in 10 British adults suffered some form of depression between July 2019 and March 2020.

But during the time when the same organization of 3,500 participants re-evaluated in June, the figure had risen to 19.2%, almost one in five.

Most (84%) of others with some form of depression mentioned that tension and anxiety affected their well-being and 42% reported that their relationships had been affected.

Tim Vizard of the ONS said: “Almost one in five adults suffered from some form of depression during the pandemic, nearly double the number of about one in ten adults before.

“Young adults, women, unable to afford unforeseen or disabled expenses for others were maximums likely to have suffered some form of pandemic depression.”

ENGLAND’S ‘IRRESPONSIBLE’ PUBLIC HEALTH BREAK MUST BE ANNOUNCED

Plans to dismantle Public Health England amid a pandemic are “irresponsible” and “ridiculous,” the Labour Party said.

Shadow health secretary Jonathon Ashworth, structural reorganization “takes time” and “undermines energy.”

In a series of scathing tweets, Ashworth said the government seeks to “reject guilt” when it announced its goal of dismantling the besieged organization later.

A short story with The Sunday Telegraph suggests that PHE’s Covid-19 reaction paintings merge with NHS Test and Trace to shape a new fitness coverage institute, designed in particular to deal with pandemics.

Meanwhile, Ashworth said the NHS’s testing and traceability service “outperforms the global as promised.”

Her conservative counterpart, Baroness Harding, former director of Talk Talk who runs the Test and Trace programme in England, is the interim director of the new organisation.

Ashworth said: “Last year, ministers presented PHE’s priorities. They did mention preparing for a pandemic.

“Structural reorganization in the context of a pandemic takes time and reduces energy. It’s really irresponsible.

“And what an insulting way to treat the workers who heard about this in a Sunday newspaper with paywalls, leaving them with questions and considerations about their work.”

On Monday, PHE chief Duncan Selbie wrote to staff saying that “sorry beyond words” that the body’s long-term had been informed through the media before his staff were informed.

SOUTH KOREA FORBIDS LARGE PUBLIC MEETINGS

South Korea will ban giant public gatherings and shut down churches and nightclubs in Seoul after an alarming accumulation of coronavirus cases.

The measures, which will take effect Wednesday in Seoul, neighboring Gyeonggi and Incheon province, prohibit meetings of more than 50 people inside and 100 outside.

Nightclubs, karaoke rooms, buffet restaurants, computer game cafes and other high-risk services will be closed, while churches will have to change places.

South Korea reported 246 new cases of coronavirus on Tuesday, bringing its total days after 959.

8th WEEK OF SUITE, DECESS IN THE FUND IN FIVE YEARS

A total of 8,945 deaths were recorded in England and Wales in the week ending 7 August, according to the Office for National Statistics, 157 below the five-year average of 9,102.

This is the eighth consecutive week that deaths are below the five-year average.

Of the deaths recorded in the week before August 7, 152 indexed Covid-19 on the death certificate, the lowest number of Covid-19-related deaths since the week ending March 20 (103 deaths).

WILLIAMSON – ‘DIFFICULT TIME’

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson admitted that the consequences of A-level U-turn cause a “difficult time.”

When asked at LBC if this was the most complicated time of his political career, he said: “It’s a difficult time.

“But every step of the way, I know that every single action we’ve taken, we’ve taken them to act in the most productive interests of academics and maintain the integrity of the system, making sure academics get the results.

When asked if he had come forward (he didn’t), Williamson said he had a “triple” goal: for academics to “get the qualifications they deserve,” reopen schools in September, and achieve a “revolution” in school systems.

WUHAN IMAGE

All with the strict January blockade.

EIGHT PEOPLE LINKED TO THE TEST OF MEN WORKING POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS

Eight other people with ties to a club of male runners tested positive for coronavirus, a local authority said.

Those who visited the Stanley Empire Club in County Durham on August 9 and 10 and were invited to isolate themselves for 14 days from the date of their visit.

They were asked to make sure that other family members also isolated themselves during the two weeks.

The club closed and others in Stanley closed after the outbreak.

Durham County Council has been working with Public Health England and NHS Test and Trace since the first suspected cases were discovered.

PRIVATE HOSPITALS WILL PAY 10 Billion – FOR NHS FACILITATED WAIT

Private hospitals in England will get up to 10 billion pounds over the next four years to treat NHS patients to ease tension on long waiting lists in public gyms after the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Financial Times.

WILLIAMSON REFUSES TO SAY IF HE RESIGNS

Gavin Williamson answered questions about whether he would resign, or whether he had submitted his resignation to Boris Johnson, for control of the A-level and GCSE exams.

He told BBC Breakfast: “At each and every level of concern in the formula, there is a general consensus that a moderate instructor assessment formulates the right formula for all parties.

“This is anything that has been done in Scotland through the SNP. This is anything that has been done through Labour and the Liberal Democrats in Wales. This is anything that has been done through the DUP and Sinn Fein in Northern Ireland and, of course, what we have done here in England as well.

When asked if he would resign, Williamson said, “What we’re doing is focusing on giving notes to those children.

“We are making sure that all schools are returned and I am surely determined that next year it will deliver the most productive school formula in the world.

“MEGA MESS”

Special Committee on Education chairman Robert Halfon described the review as a “mega waste” after warning him of the threat of disadvantaged academics being adversely affected.

When asked who to blame for the disruptions with the examination system, he told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “We want to track him down. I’d like to see the record of everything that’s happened.

“We note in our report of the Special Committee on Education published in early July that this would pose significant disruptions and that it could harm the disadvantaged.

“We suggest that Ofqual extend the appeal procedure and publish its model, the so-called algorithm, so that it can be subject to scrutiny. They refused to do so.

“I think we see Ofqual’s minutes and what’s going on with the Department of Education, I also think we know how much he charges the taxpayer just to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

He added: “What happened was a huge waste and I actually regret to all the academics, academics and parents across the country who have been so distressed over the next week because of them.”

Conservative MP Robert Halfon said the disorders with the test formula will be a “mass attention call” for the government.

COVID-19: THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC HEALTH WILL BE REVEALED

The long-term public aptitude in England is expected to be announced later through Secretary of Health Matt Hancock.

Hancock is expected to speak in the Policy Exchange Group The Future of Public Health.

This occurs in the middle of reports that PHE wants to be deleted.

He has been criticized for the prospect of dismantling the health care formula amid a pandemic.

Ministers were also accused that the BSP was a “scapegoat” for other errors of the crisis.

On Monday, the head of the besieged organization apologized for delivering the news of the organization’s demise.

Duncan Selbie, the executive leader of PHE, said that “sorry beyond words” that the organization’s long-term has been informed by the media before its staff were informed.

POSITIVE TEST OF PRIMARY STUDENTS FOR CORONAVIRUS

Three academics from different number one schools tested positive for coronavirus.

Renfrewshire City Council said a case had been shown at Todholm Primary School in Paisley, while two cases had been detected in pupils from Perth and Kinross.

One student attends Newhill Elementary School in Blairgowrie, while the other attends Oakbank Elementary School in Perth, and lately both are isolated at home with mild symptoms with an immediate circle of family members.

NEARLY 7,000 JOBS ARE REFERRED TO

Around 7,000 jobs are being cut off at retail giant Marks and Spencer as a component of a new reorganization of its retail outlets and control over the coronavirus crisis.

The organization said roles deserve to expand over the next 3 months in stores, regional control, and its center.

M-S expects a “significant” number of roles to be eliminated through voluntary retirement and early retirement, while stating that it will also create jobs through increased investment in the online garage and its new environmental food warehouse.

This is because the overall sales of your clothing and home business, which has been heavily affected, fell by 29.9% in the 8 weeks following the reopening of stores, with a drop in store sales of 47.9% and a 39.2% drop in online sales.

He said sales declines were improving but that “it is clear that there has been a significant replacement in trade.”

THE VICTORY OUTBREAK LINKED TO QUARANTAN HOTELS

Almost all cases of coronavirus in Victoria, Australia, can be attributed to travelers who returned to quarantine, to an investigation.

The investigation also revealed that guards at quarantined hotels had won “inappropriate” advice.

Guards were informed that masks and other protections would be needed, provided they adhered to a social distance of 1.5 m.

Victoria is recently blocked due to a wave of infections.

Stricter restrictions were put in place on the “fourth stage” in the city of Melbourne on 2 August for six weeks.

On Monday, Victoria recorded 25 more deaths and 282 new instances of the virus, making it the deadliest day in the state since the start of the pandemic.

QUESTIONS REMAIN FOR WILLIAMSON AFTER A LIFE RUN IN GCSE AND A-LEVEL GRADES

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson faces calls for clarity for academics and universities after his half-turn screaming about GCSE and A-level ratings in England.

Williamson downgraded the rating that the estimated effects through teachers can be used after developing anger by the degradation of approximately 40% of A grades through the Ofqual test regulator based on a debatable algorithm.

The Cabinet Minister apologized for the “anguish” over the deserted policy of achieving fair effects for academics who were unable to take the test due to the coronavirus crisis.

Conservative MP and Select Committee on Education Chairman Robert Halfon wrote in The Sun: “This is a huge mess. But it’s better to correct anything than to continue with the disaster.

Thousands more people will now get higher grades, but questions have been left unanswered for universities, which were removed from a limit on tenders, and students, who still face uncertainty about university offerings.

Alistair Jarvis, managing director of Universities UK, which represents vice-chancellors, called for them to “urgently clarify” a number of “crucial issues.”

He said the “overdue stage” replenishment will “pose challenges” in terms of capacity and the body of workers, as he called on ministers to “strengthen and universities.”

Other questions similar to whether academics who have accepted an offer in moderate grades can replace colleges and when academics will get their new grades.

Williamson said he had acted after realizing over the weekend that there were “real concerns” about the results, but his intervention at such an outdated level led some critics to call for his resignation.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Williamson had in the past defended the “robust” system, while the education secretary insisted that “there will be no U.S. change, no replacement” and said a replacement can lead to “progressive rating inflation.”

Halfon told The Sun that the Conservative Party had one of their lives in the “fiasco.”

He wrote that it was the blue-collar staff who gave the Conservatives the “thumbs up” in the last general election, but that it was “the disadvantaged youth who were defrauded by clumsy bureaucrats in this agonizing chaos. place again.”

Ofqual’s chairman, Roger Taylor, admitted that the regulator had taken the “wrong path” and apologized.

LEARN MORE ABOUT LEICESTER’S POTENTIAL LOCK-BLOCKING ELEVATOR

Now that cases are declining, Health Secretary Matt Hancock is expected to ease Leicester’s restrictions to the fullest.

Officials conducted a review of Leicester’s knowledge on Monday, but the announcement was delayed due to a vanquished error in the numbers.

A Spokesman for No. 10 said the blocking restrictions remained “under constant control.”

When asked if the measures in Leicester could simply rise, he said: “We continue to maintain all spaces in consistent conditions and where we can alleviate the restrictions, we have done so.”

Leicester’s seven-day infection rate is 135 cases, consisting of 100,000 at the end of June.

Cases have now been halved to 67 cases per 100,000.

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