âI think weâve got to recognize that the pressure on our NHS, on our hospitals, is going to be considerable in the course the next couple of weeks, and maybe more,â Johnson said during a visit to a vaccination center in Aylesbury, 85 kilometers (53 miles) northwest of London.
Johnson was speaking after The Sunday Times newspaper reported that a group of hospitals in the eastern county of Lincolnshire had declared a âcritical incidentâ due to âextreme and unprecedentedâ staff shortages.
Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents health trusts that run hospitals around the country, told the BBC: âWeâre seeing increasing staff absences, and thatâs coming on top of a very significant amount of wider pressure.â
And Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation that represents 1.5 million health workers, said much of the health service is in âa state of crisisâ thatâs exacerbated by a high demand for services and staff absences.
âSome hospitals are making urgent calls to exhausted staff to give up rest days and leave to enable them to sustain core services. Many more hospitals are having to ban visitors to try to reduce the spread of infection,â he said.
Johnsonâs government removed almost all coronavirus restrictions in July, but last month reversed course and triggered its âPlan Bâ for England â ordering face coverings be worn in indoor public places, requiring proof of vaccination or a negative test to enter nightclubs and asking people to work from home if they can.
Johnson on Monday urged people to adhere to those rules and get a booster vaccination shot, as the government seeks to shore up staffing shortages.
âSo do all the things that Iâve said, make sure we follow a Plan B, get boosted but also help the NHS with their staffing requirements, and weâre looking at what we can do to move people into those areas that are particularly badly affected,â he said.
But Johnson appeared to rule out any tightening of measures in coming days.
âI think the way forward for the country as a whole is to continue with the path that weâre on. Weâll will keep everything under review,â he said.
âThe mixture of things that weâre doing at the moment is, I think, the right one.â
Earlier, Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi told the BBC that data from London, which has seen surging infection rates in recent weeks, appear to show a âplateauingâ of rates, but he added, âwe are seeing leakage into the over-50s in terms of infections, and itâs generally the over-50s who end up with severe infection and hospitalization.â
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