Prime Minister sets out roadmap to cautiously ease lockdown restrictions
Government publishes four-step roadmap to ease restrictions across
England and provide a route back to a more normal way of life Each
step to be assessed against four tests before restrictions ease,
starting with the return of schools on 8 March PM is clear that the
decision on each stage will be based on data not dates, and
government will move cautiously to keep infection rates under
control The Prime Minister has announced the government’s roadmap
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The Prime Minister has announced the government’s roadmap to
cautiously ease lockdown restrictions in England.
In a statement to parliament this afternoon he paid tribute to
the extraordinary success of the UK’s vaccination programme and
the resolve of the British public in following the lockdown
restrictions, which has helped to cut infection rates and reduce
the spread of the virus.
He also set out the latest vaccine efficacy data, with Public
Health England finding that one dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech
vaccine reduces hospitalisations and deaths by at least 75%.
Analysis of the AstraZeneca vaccine efficacy continues, with
promising early results.
Supported by the increased protection offered by these vaccines,
the government is able to slowly and cautiously begin to ease
restrictions in all areas across England at the same time, guided
at all stages by data, not dates.
The roadmap, which has now been published on gov.uk, outlines
four steps for easing restrictions. Before proceeding to the next
step, the Government will examine the data to assess the impact
of previous steps.
This assessment will be based on four tests:
There will be a minimum of five weeks between each step: four
weeks for the data to reflect changes in restrictions; followed
by seven days’ notice of the restrictions to be eased.
The Chief Medical Officer and the Chief Scientific Adviser have
made clear that this will give adequate time to assess the impact
of each step and reduce the risk of having to re-impose
restrictions at a later date.
As the Prime Minister said, getting children back into school has
been the top priority, and so from 8 March all children and
students will return to face to face education in schools and
college. By this point, everyone in the top four vaccine priority
cohorts – as determined by the independent JCVI – will have
received the first dose of their vaccine and developed the
necessary protection from it.
Also from this date:
As part of step one, there will be further limited changes from
29 March, the week in which most schools will break up for
Easter. Outdoor gatherings of either 6 people or 2 households
will be allowed, providing greater flexibility for families to
see each other. This includes in private gardens.
Outdoor sports facilities, such as tennis and basketball courts,
will be allowed to reopen, and people can take part in formally
organised outdoor sports.
At this point, the Stay at Home order will end, although many
lockdown restrictions will remain.
For example, you should continue to work from home where
possible, and overseas travel remains banned, aside for a small
number of reasons.
The subsequent steps are set out as follows:
Step 2, no earlier than 12 April:
Step 3, no earlier than 17 May:
Step 4, no earlier than 21 June:
In the meantime, the vaccination programme continues at pace,
with the announcement of a new target to offer a first dose of
the vaccine to every adult by the end of July.
The government hopes that the increased protection offered by
vaccines will gradually replace the restrictions, with the
roadmap published today providing the principles of the
transition.
MPs will have an opportunity to vote on the regulations that will
enable this roadmap in Parliament in the coming weeks.
We continue to work closely with the Devolved Administrations as
we have throughout the pandemic. They are setting out approaches
for easing for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The roadmap can be found in full here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-response-spring-2021
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