Lost family members through this horrendous, absolutely appalling virus. Downing street has announced the Prime Minister will return to work on monday. The World Health Organization warns that people who have recovered from coronavirus may not be protected from reinfection. Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are rosamund urwin, Senior Reporter for the sunday times, and broadcaster penny smith. Tomorrows front pages. The express hails the return of borisjohnson after recovering from the virus, saying hell be back at his desk for key meetings regarding easing the lockdown. The mail on sunday leads on the story about a so called Game Changing immunity test that could check if people have developed immunity to the coronavirus. The Observer Says borisjohnson will return to work facing a lockdown dilemma as scientists suggest the number of cases is still too high for measures to be relaxed. The telegraphs headline two weeks quaran
Help from the chancellor. A warning that people with autism have been forgotten in the pandemic. Families say many are struggling to access the care they need. Its been this terrible, terrible. I mean, probably the most stressful week of my life because. Oh, sorry i dont know whats wrong with him. Morning. As borisjohnson gets back to work today, let me know this morning what you want to hear from him. We are expecting to hear from him outside downing street this morning, a month after he was diagnosed with coronavirus. Boris johnson is back in downing street to take charge of the uks response to the pandemic. The Prime Minister will chair the morning Cabinet Meeting on covid 19, before holding talks with senior ministers and officials. He arrived back at number ten yesterday evening amid mounting pressure to begin lifting lockdown measures. After seven weeks of tight restrictions in italy, officials there have outlined plans to ease the lockdown. Parks, factories and Building Sites wi
From muck and shovels to life on Mars – how building technology has evolved over 150 years constructionnews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from constructionnews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
4 Apr 2021
Emergency field hospitals established across the country by the British government at a cost of hundreds of millions of pounds are being stood down and decommissioned, in many cases without having treated a single patient for coronavirus.
12 so-called ‘Nightingale’ hospitals named for a famed 19th-century British nurse who revolutionised healthcare practices were established across the United Kingdom in 2020, part of a plan to see the nation prepared for a sudden surge in critical coronavirus cases. Built inside sports stadia, convention centers, and former retail premises, the sites provided thousands of extra beds.
Now more of the Nightingale hospitals are being shut down without having seen a single patient. The 500-bed Yorkshire Nightingale has now been stood down, the BBC reports, and like some others, it has not treated a single Coronavirus patient since it was opened in April 2020.