Saturday Nov 23, 2024
Monday, 16 March 2020 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
London (Reuters): Britain told manufacturers to ramp up the country’s production of ventilators and ordered private hospitals to prepare for an overspill of patients from the public health service as the death toll from coronavirus grew on Saturday.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has been criticised for so far not following more draconian steps taken by other European countries, was preparing to ban mass gatherings from next week, a government source said.
Health authorities in England announced a further 10 coronavirus deaths, almost doubling since Friday although the toll remains lower than in Italy, Spain and France.
“Ministers are working with the chief scientific adviser and chief medical officer on our plan to stop various types of public events, including mass gatherings, beginning next week,” the government source said.
Johnson’s office said later on Saturday that he was due to speak to manufacturers on Monday about supporting the production of essential medical kit. Engineers had been asked to find ways to quickly produce more ventilators in Britain which the government would buy. Germany and Italy have scrambled to get more ventilators, and manufacturers warned on Friday that hospitals everywhere faced a lack of equipment needed to treat coronavirus patients.
The Sunday Telegraph said companies including Rolls-Royce (RR.L) had been asked by Johnson to transform their production lines to produce ventilators as part of a “national effort.”
The government was also negotiating with healthcare firms about paying for thousands of beds in private hospitals.
“The public are right to be proud of the NHS, but the scale of the challenge we face means we can’t do this alone,” the head of the public National Health Service, Simon Stevens, said. All hospitals would be given instructions on Monday, he said.
The government plans to publish legislation next week that would give it powers to deal with the outbreak, including to stop mass gatherings and compensate organisations.
As of Saturday morning, 21 people had died after testing positive for COVID-19 in Britain.
Britain’s health ministry said the number of confirmed positive tests for coronavirus in the country rose to 1,140 on Saturday, a 43% increase from the figure of 798 given on Friday.
By comparison, Italy said its death toll from COVID-19 rose to 1,441 and France reported an increase to 91.