Kamis, 28 Januari 2021

Another shot in the arm for Britain! 60million MORE jabs set to be made in UK - Daily Mail

Britain on course to produce another 60million Covid vaccines as UK-based Novavax jab PASSES phase three trial with stunning 90% success rate (including quashing 86% of infections by mutant Kent strain that's ravaged the nation)

  • US biotech firm Novavax announced its vaccine had successfully completed Phase Three clinical trials in UK
  • Under a deal with the UK government, 60million doses of the vaccine will be produced on Teesside for UK use
  • The vaccine still requires final approval from the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
  • The firm Novavax last night said that the trials had shown its coronavirus vaccine was 89.3 per cent effective
  • This trial is the first to be completed since the emergence of the new variant of the Covid-19 disease in Kent
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Britain was on course to secure another 60million Covid jabs last night after the latest UK-backed vaccine cleared a crucial hurdle.

US biotech firm Novavax announced its vaccine had successfully completed its phase three clinical trials in the UK, paving the way for regulators to give final approval in the coming weeks.

Under a deal with the Government, 60million doses of the vaccine will be produced on Teesside for use in this country, in what could prove to be another triumph for Britain's world-leading vaccine programme.

Novavax last night said the trials had shown its vaccine was 89.3 per cent effective.

The trial is the first to be completed since the emergence of the new variant of the disease in Kent. Preliminary analysis suggests the vaccine was 85.6 per cent effective against this mutation.

The two-shot vaccine still requires final approval from the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency.

But Whitehall sources said that, if the regulatory process goes smoothly, the jabs could start coming on stream this summer, allowing a huge acceleration in the drive to inoculate all adults by the end of September.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson hailed the 'spectacular' results, adding in a tweet: 'Good news that the Novavax vaccine has proved effective in UK trials.'

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said: 'Having taken part in Novavax's vaccine trial myself, I am particularly thrilled to see such positive results.'

The progress of the Novavax vaccine represents another success for the UK's Vaccines Task Force, which has left the EU scrambling to catch up.

A sluggish regulatory process in Brussels has meant only the Pfizer vaccine has so far been approved for use in the EU.

The bloc's vaccine drive has been plunged into crisis, with Brussels embroiled in a bitter stand-off with Astra-Zeneca after the Anglo-Swedish firm said it could only supply a fraction of the 100million does it had allegedly promised.

On another dramatic day:

  • The PM flatly rejected Germany's decision not to give the AstraZeneca jab to people over 65;
  • The EU ordered a raid on AstraZeneca's Belgian plant in a bid to prove it was lying about vaccine production problems;
  • Brussels prepared to unveil powers that could see the shipment of millions of vaccine doses to Britain blocked;
  • The British Government warned the EU it would not share its supply until everyone aged over 50 has been vaccinated here;
  • Nicola Sturgeon was accused of undermining efforts to prevent the EU from taking British vaccines by threatening to publish details of confidential supplies;
  • French health authorities suggested they were already struggling with shortages; 
  • Figures showed cases continuing to fall across England and among all age groups;
  • It emerged the tier system could be scrapped after lockdown under plans to ease restrictions on a national basis;
  • Models and social media influencers were among thousands of British travellers facing a desperate race home to avoid being stranded in Dubai and Abu Dhabi;
  • A sensational £1.25million in a single day was raised for Mail Force to help pupils;
  • Health leaders warned social care was in danger of an imminent collapse without a government action plan;
  • It emerged children could be invited to take part in summer schools to help them catch up on months of missed education.
Pictured: Boris Johnson tried his hand at one of the tests as he visits the French biotechnology laboratory Valneva in Livingston, Scotland, where they will be producing a Covid-19 vaccine on a large scale on Thursday

Pictured: Boris Johnson tried his hand at one of the tests as he visits the French biotechnology laboratory Valneva in Livingston, Scotland, where they will be producing a Covid-19 vaccine on a large scale on Thursday

Pictured: Pharmacist Bhaveen Patel gives a dose of the Oxford / AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine to Brian Bourne at a coronavirus vaccination clinic held at Junction Pharmacy in Brixton, London, on Thursday

Pictured: Pharmacist Bhaveen Patel gives a dose of the Oxford / AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine to Brian Bourne at a coronavirus vaccination clinic held at Junction Pharmacy in Brixton, London, on Thursday

US biotech firm Novavax announced its vaccine had successfully completed its Phase Three clinical trials in the UK, paving the way for regulators to give final approval in the coming weeks (stock image)

 US biotech firm Novavax announced its vaccine had successfully completed its Phase Three clinical trials in the UK, paving the way for regulators to give final approval in the coming weeks (stock image)

England, Wales and Northern Ireland gave out 284,954 Covid-19 vaccines on Wednesday, official figures show, as the drive to immunise the UK is off its 400,000-a-day target needed to reach 15 million by mid-February

England, Wales and Northern Ireland gave out 284,954 Covid-19 vaccines on Wednesday, official figures show, as the drive to immunise the UK is off its 400,000-a-day target needed to reach 15 million by mid-February

How did the UK end up as one of the world's leading countries on the vaccine roll-out?

The UK is one of the world's leading countries when it comes to the speed of the roll-out of its coronavirus vaccination programme - a fact made all the more impressive given where the nation started when the pandemic hit early last year. 

At that point the country had just one vaccine manufacturing site - a facility in Liverpool which made flu jabs.

But the Government quickly set up a vaccine task force in April to make sure the UK was well-positioned to benefit from medical breakthroughs.

The experts appointed to the task force reportedly recommended seven projects for investment within its first two weeks, according to The Times. 

Advance purchase orders were hammered out by the task force with suppliers despite the fact there were no guarantees that any of the vaccines would work or that they would be signed off by regulators.  

That early work meant the UK was in pole position to receive the jabs, if and when they were shown to be effective and safe. 

The task force's strategy means two companies have been relied upon to do much of the heavy lifting during the UK's vaccine roll-out: Pfizer and AstraZeneca. 

The UK ordered 40 million doses from the former and 100 million doses from the latter. 

Agreements are also in place with a handful of other would-be suppliers should their products get the green light. 

The speed with which the UK moved on vaccines was perhaps best illustrated this week when Pascal Soriot, the chief executive of AstraZeneca, revealed the deal with Britain was agreed three months before the EU's. 

The UK's supply of the AstraZeneca vaccine is made at sites in Oxford and Staffordshire before it is put into vials at a facility in Wrexham, while the Pfizer jab is made in Belgium.

Every new batch of vaccine in the UK has to be safety tested by the National Institute of Biological Standards and Control in Hertfordshire before it can be sent for delivery. 

This process takes about four days and once each batch has been rubber-stamped it is taken to secure Government warehouses where the NHS takes over the process and decides where the doses will be sent.

The physical roll-out of the vaccine is headquartered from an NHS office in London, with doses sent to more than 1,400 vaccine sites across the country.

It is easily the biggest vaccination drive in the history of the health service and many believe it will become an annual programme.   

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Last year, Novavax said pre-clinical trials showed its potential vaccine produced 'robust antibody responses'. The firm announced plans for the critical phase three trials in the UK in September last year.

It recruited 15,000 volunteers. Of these, around a quarter were aged over 65 – a far higher proportion than tested in trials of the Oxford vaccine. 

Half the volunteers were given two shots of the vaccine, while the rest were given a placebo.

Last night, the firm said some 62 people in the study came down with Covid-19 with symptoms after receiving either the vaccine or placebo. Of these, six had received the vaccine and 56 had the placebo.

Among sick patients, about half were infected with the new variant. Experts believe both the AstraZeneca and Pfizer jabs are also effective against the Kent variant.

A separate Novavax trial in South Africa found the vaccine was only 49.4 per cent effective against the dangerous new variant which has emerged there.

If approved, the Novavax vaccine would be the fourth jab given the green light in the UK. British regulators have also approved the US-made Moderna vaccine, which is expected to come on stream this spring.

Under the terms of the Novavax deal, UK supplies will be manufactured at the Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies factory in Billingham.

It came as the PM flatly rejected Germany's decision not to give the AstraZeneca Covid jab to over-65s.

In an unexpected move, Germany's vaccine advisory committee declared yesterday there was insufficient data to show that the AstraZeneca jab worked on older people.

The Prime Minister and health experts immediately challenged the recommendation, with Mr Johnson suggesting it would be contradicted by the EU's own medicines regulator.

He insisted the AstraZeneca jab, developed jointly with Oxford University, was 'a good vaccine and so I'm very confident about it'.

He added: 'The evidence that they've supplied is that they think that it is effective across all age groups. It provides them a good immune response across all age groups, so I don't agree with [the German decision].'

The Prime Minister was backed by British health experts who acknowledged that a low number of over-65s had taken part in trials for the vaccine, but insisted it had been shown to be safe and there was no reason to think it would not work on older people.

Dr Mary Ramsay, head of immunisations at Public Health England, said: 'Both the AstraZeneca and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines are safe and provide high levels of protection against Covid-19, particularly against severe disease.

'There were too few cases in older people in the AstraZeneca trials to observe precise levels of protection in this group, but data on immune responses were very reassuring.'

Dr June Raine, chief executive of the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), said: 'Current evidence does not suggest any lack of protection against Covid-19 in people aged 65 or over. The data shows that the vaccine produces a strong immune response in the over-65s.'

The AstraZeneca jab is central to Britain's vaccination programme, with 100million doses ordered. However, Europe has become involved in a bitter stand-off with the pharmaceutical giant after the Anglo-Swedish firm said it could supply only around 25million of the 100million doses it had allegedly promised to the EU.

Boris Johnson met armed forces personnel at a youth centre in Castlemilk, Glasgow today, as he thanked people for their efforts on the coronavirus response

Boris Johnson met armed forces personnel at a youth centre in Castlemilk, Glasgow today, as he thanked people for their efforts on the coronavirus response

EU chiefs demanded that AstraZeneca jabs made in Staffordshire and Oxfordshire be diverted to make up for a 75million shortfall on the continent. Pictured: European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen

EU chiefs demanded that AstraZeneca jabs made in Staffordshire and Oxfordshire be diverted to make up for a 75million shortfall on the continent. Pictured: European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen

PM and UK health chiefs insist AstraZeneca vaccine IS effective for ALL age groups after Germany claims jab should not be used on over-65s yet 

Boris Johnson and UK health chief insisted the AstraZeneca vaccine works for all age groups today after German scientists said they will not recommend it for over-65s because they believe there is not yet enough evidence.  

The PM and Public Health England struck a bullish note after a Berlin commission said there was 'insufficient data to assess the efficacy of the vaccine for persons aged 65 years and older'. 

British regulators, by contrast, have approved the jab for all age groups - with AstraZeneca pointing to data published in a medical journal showing that 100 per cent of older adults generated antibodies in trials.

Germany's stance comes amid an angry row between the EU and AstraZeneca over vaccine supplies, with the bloc lagging far behind Britain in immunising its population against Covid-19. 

Although it is possible the position could change with more evidence, it raises the prospect of splits between the UK and EU on what vaccines are regarded as effective - with speculation that in the future travel to some destinations could be contingent on having been inoculated.     

On a visit to Scotland this afternoon, Mr Johnson said he was not worried about the news from Germany. 'No, because the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) our own authorities have made it very clear that they think the Oxford-AstraZeneca is very good and efficacious and gives a high degree of protection after just one does and even more after two doses,' he said.

The PM said the MHRA concluded the vaccine is 'effective across all age groups' and 'provides a good immune response across all age groups'. He added on the German conclusions: 'So I don't agree with that.'

Dr Mary Ramsay, head of immunisations at PHE, said there had been 'too few cases' of coronavirus in older people in Phase 3 clinical trial to determine efficacy in this age group, but other data on immune response had been 'reassuring'.  

AstraZeneca said: 'The latest analyses of clinical trial data for the AstraZeneca/Oxford Covid-19 vaccine support efficacy in the over 65 years age group.'   

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In retaliation the EU ordered a raid on AstraZeneca's Belgian plant in a bid to prove it is lying about production problems.

The European Medicines Agency will today announce its decision on whether to approve the AstraZeneca vaccine, which was authorised in the UK by the MHRA for all adults at the end of December.

The Prime Minister said yesterday he understood the EU regulator would make the same decision as its British counterpart, which he said would be 'very sensible'.

But even if the EMA approves the vaccine for all ages, different countries on the Continent can make their own rules.

Germany's Standing Committee on Vaccination is expected to recommend today that the vaccine is not given to over-65s.

A draft statement reportedly states that there is 'insufficient data currently available to ascertain how effective the vaccination is above 65 years'.

But there is more data from large clinical trials in Britain and Brazil which is set to be published by the EMA today, and the UK regulator has suggested it has seen enough to reassure it on older people.

Professor David Salisbury, head of immunisation at the Department of Health until 2013, said: 'Countries can, based on expert advice and the quality of evidence, use vaccines differently from the guidelines from manufacturers and regulators.

'The UK has done so by giving the second dose of the Pfizer vaccine later than the licence recommends. So Germany can decide not to give the vaccine to over-65s, even if there is no age restriction when it is approved by the EMA.

'But if it were to do this with no alternative vaccine to provide to older people, when they are at the highest risk, there would need to be a strong justification for doing so.'

Oxford University, which partnered with AstraZeneca to develop the vaccine, has said its jab offers high protection against severe disease and prevents people needing to go to hospital.

AstraZeneca said: 'The latest analyses of clinical trial data for the AstraZeneca/Oxford Covid-19 vaccine support efficacy in the over 65 years age group. We await a regulatory decision on the vaccine by the EMA in the coming days.'

Professor Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, pointed to the MHRA's report, which said there were two cases of Covid-19 in the over-65s.

The MHRA said: 'There is limited information available on efficacy in participants aged 65 or over, although there is nothing to suggest lack of protection.'

A Phase 3 Lancet study which was published in December said older age groups had been recruited later into the study so 'efficacy data in these cohorts are currently limited by the small number of cases, but additional data will be available in future analyses'.

Brussels will unveil dramatic new powers today that could see the shipment of millions of vaccine doses to Britain being blocked within days.

As the row over the EU jabs shortage intensifies, the European Commission will establish a mechanism to allow member states to refuse vaccine exports.

The move will heighten fears about whether Britain's expected supply of the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine – which is manufactured in Belgium – could be disrupted. Britain has ordered 40 million doses.

EU officials have demanded that Covid vaccines made in the UK be exported to Europe to help plug shortfalls in its own jabs roll-out, which is among the slowest in the world and is lagging well behind Britain

EU officials have demanded that Covid vaccines made in the UK be exported to Europe to help plug shortfalls in its own jabs roll-out, which is among the slowest in the world and is lagging well behind Britain 

These set of graphs show the number of vaccines ordered by the UK and the EU. The EU has also ordered a number of other vaccines, including 300million Sanofi-GSK doses and 405million CureVac doses

These set of graphs show the number of vaccines ordered by the UK and the EU. The EU has also ordered a number of other vaccines, including 300million Sanofi-GSK doses and 405million CureVac doses

Germany admits vaccine shortage until APRIL amid fury at EU bungling 

Germany's health minister has warned its shortage of coronavirus vaccines will stretch into April as the backlash against the EU's bungling gathered pace.

The grim message came as Germany's top-selling Bild newspaper described the problems around procuring supplies as a 'scandal'. 

Jens Spahn said he wanted to invite pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers for a summit to make sure that Europe gets its fair share of doses. 

'We will still have at least 10 tough weeks with a shortage of vaccine,' he tweeted.

Mr Spahn said he recognised that producing vaccines was very complicated and building up production could not just be done in a few weeks if quality standards were to be upheld.

Earlier this week Germany supported EU proposals to set up a register of exports of COVID-19 vaccines, as tensions grow with AstraZeneca and Pfizer over sudden supply cuts just a month after the bloc started vaccinating citizens.

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It came as Belgian health authorities revealed they had been sent into an AstraZeneca factory in the town of Seneffe where doses of its vaccine are being made.

The commission requested the inspection due to doubts over the Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical firm's explanation for its shortfall in deliveries to the bloc. 'We want to see if what we are being told is correct or not,' one EU official said.

The EU has been left furious by AstraZeneca's announcement that it would have to cut deliveries of its Covid-19 vaccine to the bloc by 60 per cent because of production problems.

Brussels has raised questions about whether doses from the factory have secretly been shipped to Britain.

That has led to the EU to reconsider whether jabs being manufactured on the continent should be allowed to leave while it is suffering a supply crisis.

As a result, under the proposals to be finalised today, customs authorities in EU countries will have to notify the commission every time jabs are being sent outside the bloc.

An EU official said: 'There is a possibility in certain circumstances not to allow the export to move forward. We want to ensure we have a say about where these vaccines are ending up.'

The official insisted that a refusal would happen only in 'rare cases' when companies were failing to fulfil their contractual commitments to the EU.

'In an ideal world, we would not be here. In an ideal world, the whole story of vaccination would run smoothly without any problems.

'But unfortunately we are not in an ideal world, and we have seen over the last weeks that not all works well,' the official said.

'That's why, and given the circumstances around with certain states around the world, even in our neighbourhood, acting in terms of restrictions of exports, even banning exports for certain products, I think we need to be up front, and we need to react.'

‘We reject the logic of first come, first served,’ said Stella Kyriakides (pictured). ‘That may work in a butcher’s shop but not in contracts and not in our advanced purchase agreements'

'We reject the logic of first come, first served,' said Stella Kyriakides (pictured). 'That may work in a butcher's shop but not in contracts and not in our advanced purchase agreements'

The European Commission will establish a mechanism to allow member states to refuse vaccine exports tomorrow -threatening Britain's order of 40million doses from Pfizer. European Council president Charles Michel, who chairs meetings of EU leaders, has backed the use of legal measures to protect the bloc’s vaccine supply

The European Commission will establish a mechanism to allow member states to refuse vaccine exports tomorrow -threatening Britain's order of 40million doses from Pfizer. European Council president Charles Michel, who chairs meetings of EU leaders, has backed the use of legal measures to protect the bloc's vaccine supply

Belgian health authorities were sent to AstraZeneca's European production site in Seneffe on Thursday after the European Commission demanded an inspection of the site. They were sent in after AstraZeneca told the EU it would only receive a quarter of the jabs it expected by April due to delays in production

Belgian health authorities were sent to AstraZeneca's European production site in Seneffe on Thursday after the European Commission demanded an inspection of the site. They were sent in after AstraZeneca told the EU it would only receive a quarter of the jabs it expected by April due to delays in production

The criteria for blocking exports will be published today, with the mechanism expected to come into force within days.

European Council president Charles Michel, who chairs meetings of EU leaders, yesterday backed the use of legal measures to protect the bloc's vaccine supply.

In a letter to the leaders of four member states, he wrote: 'The EU needs to take robust action to secure its supply of vaccines and demonstrate concretely that the protection of its citizens remains our absolute priority.'

The EU is facing a shortfall in supply of vaccines after AstraZeneca warned Brussels last week that problems with production in Belgium meant the bloc will receive only a quarter of the 100 million doses it had expected to receive in the first three months of this year.

Vaccines WILL limit the spread of coronavirus – but we won't know how by much until mid-February, experts say 

Britain's vaccine roll out will limit the spread of coronavirus, but by exactly how much will not be made clear until mid-February, experts say.

Providing a boost to the UK's hopes of ending lockdown, England's deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said jabs 'couldn't fail to have some effect on transmission'.

He said it was less a question of 'will they?' and rather 'to what extent' will inoculation help to reduce the spread.

But Boris Johnson and his chief scientists tonight said experts won't know much effect the coronavirus vaccines are having on the country's epidemic until mid-February,

The PM said the impact of the jabs won't be felt in hospital and deaths data until then due to the lag in time it takes between getting injected and developing immunity.

He told a Downing Street press conference tonight that he would not consider lifting lockdown restrictions until he'd seen concrete 'evidence that those graphs are coming down'.

The immunisation drive has only really got up to speed in the last few weeks and it takes between a fortnight and a month for a person to build up immunity.

Both the Pfizer and Oxford University vaccines have been proven to block severe illness, so experts hope they'll start to make a dent in the death and hospitalisation rates in the coming weeks.

No10's scientists will be monitoring those metrics, specifically in the most vulnerable groups - including the over-80s, over-75s and care homes residents - who are currently receiving the jabs.

So far 6.8million, or one in 10, people in Britain have received at least one dose of the vaccines.

In three weeks time, when most of those people have protection, experts will expect to see a near 10 per cent drop in hospital admissions.

Not all of the people vaccinated will be immune, however, because the jabs are not perfect. Pfizer's is 95 per cent effective at blocking severe disease, while Oxford's is around 70 per cent. 

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French health authorities are already struggling with shortages. A number of regions across the country yesterday cancelled first-jab appointments that were due to be held in early February, postponing them by at least a month.

German health minister Jens Spahn said the country was likely to face a shortage of vaccines until at least April.

Spain's Madrid and Cantabria regions have also stopped first vaccinations and are using remaining doses to administer second shots to those who have had the first one.

Portugal, where infections and deaths have spiked to record levels after Christmas, said delivery delays meant that people who have top priority – including health professionals – will all be fully vaccinated by April, around two months later than initially planned.

The Netherlands will also struggle to execute its vaccination programme.

But Britain last night warned the EU that the country will not share its jabs stocks until all over-50s had been vaccinated.

Cabinet minister Michael Gove insisted yesterday there would be 'no interruption' to UK supplies from AstraZeneca after Brussels demanded doses from British factories in the row over shortages.

Mr Gove said the 'first and most important thing' was that the delivery schedule agreed with the UK-based pharmaceuticals giant was honoured so the domestic vaccine rollout can be delivered before neighbouring nations are aided.

The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster said Britain had an 'absolute assurance' that supplies promised by AstraZeneca would be delivered in full.

More than 40million doses are expected before April. Mr Gove told Radio 4's Today programme: 'The supplies that have been planned, paid for and scheduled should continue, absolutely. There will be no interruption to that.'

Downing Street declined to rule out vaccines being sent to the EU once the over-50s have received the jab, to help the bloc address its supply shortages.

The Prime Minister's official spokesman said the Government still aims to 'vaccinate the most vulnerable across the UK' by spring and all adults by September.

In a break from protocol on Thursday Nicola Sturgeon stood accused of undermining efforts to prevent the EU from taking British vaccines by threatening to publish details of confidential supplies.

The Scottish First Minister said she would defy Westminster and once again start releasing data on how many doses are being delivered.

The Government wants this information to be kept secret amid tensions with other nations struggling to secure vaccines.

It came as Boris Johnson dismissed calls for a fresh vote on Scotland breaking away from the UK as 'completely irrelevant' to most people as he made a controversial trip north of the border yesterday.

Earlier this month the Scottish devolved administration was forced to change vaccination documents it had published online when the Government claimed that setting out how many doses are expected and when could breach commercial confidentiality.

But Miss Sturgeon has now threatened to go back to publishing the data from next week after coming under fire about the vaccine rollout in Scotland.

In an extraordinary move this afternoon, Nicola Sturgeon risked undermining the UK's position by announcing she will publish details of the country's vaccine supplies from next week

In an extraordinary move this afternoon, Nicola Sturgeon risked undermining the UK's position by announcing she will publish details of the country's vaccine supplies from next week

Cabinet minister Michael Gove said the UK will discuss 'how we can help' the EU's vaccination effort. But asked if the UK might lose out because the EU has not got enough doses, Mr Gove said: 'No.'

Cabinet minister Michael Gove said the UK will discuss 'how we can help' the EU's vaccination effort. But asked if the UK might lose out because the EU has not got enough doses, Mr Gove said: 'No.'

Johnson & Johnson's one-shot Covid vaccine could soon be added to Britain's arsenal

Johnson and Johnson will publish results from phase three trials of its one-shot coronavirus vaccine next week, the company announced last night.

The jab uses similar technology to the Oxford University vaccine, making it just as easy to transport and store, but requires just a single injection to protect against Covid.

Government scientists expect the vaccine, made by Janssen, the Belgian arm of the US pharmaceutical giant, could be given emergency authorisation and rolled out in Britain by mid-February. The UK has already struck a deal for 30million doses, with the option of ordering 22million more.

If approved, it would be the third Covid jab in the UK's arsenal and could significantly speed up the programme which has been held back by supply shortages.

A fourth jab, made my US firm Moderna, sealed approval earlier this month but doses won't arrive until March because of an exclusive deal with the American Government. Developed by Janssen, the vaccine uses a harmless adenovirus to deliver genetic material that tricks the human body into producing proteins known as antigens, normally found on the coronavirus's surface, helping the immune system develop an arsenal against infection.

Like the Oxford jab, which also uses adenoviral vectors, it can be stored and transported in normal fridges. However the key difference is that the J&J jab is designed to be effective as a single dose, whereas Oxford and Pfizer's is given in two shots three or more weeks apart.

If trials show it is effective at blocking Covid, it will become the first approved jab to work in a single injection and could rapidly speed up mass immunisation plans. The 30million doses already ordered by the UK could be enough to reach almost half of the population.

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Scottish Conservative Holyrood leader Ruth Davidson had challenged her on the 'slow vaccination rate', stressing that there is 'genuine concern across Scotland at the pace of the rollout'.

The First Minister said that when her officials initially published the expected supply details, she had 'the UK Government demanding we took that out of the public domain'.

But at the same time, she said, Westminster politicians were 'quite happy to brief these figures through spin to the media'.

As a result of this, she added: 'I have said to my officials that, regardless of what they say, I think we will just go back to publishing the actual supply figures from next week, so that we all have transparency around that.'

This came despite the fact that the Scottish government was urged by Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office Minister, to withhold vaccine supply numbers from its rollout plan.

Ministers and government scientists are concerned that publishing the figures could lead to pressure on manufacturers from other nations which have fewer doses.

During his visit to Scotland yesterday, the Prime Minister said: 'We're in favour of the maximum possible transparency that is compatible with security of supply. That's the crucial thing, we've got to ensure we continue to have national security of supply.'

Alberto Costa, a Tory MP, said: 'Can I suggest that those SNP representatives focus on working with the British Prime Minister in encouraging all Britons to take the vaccine as soon as it is offered and not seek to divert valuable attention from this all-important vaccination effort.'

The Prime Minister yesterday said it was wrong to 'talk endlessly about another referendum' during the fight against Covid, as he visited a vaccination centre, a testing lab and a vaccine manufacturing factory in Scotland.

He said it would lead to 'pointless constitutional wrangling' and accused the Scottish National Party of using the repeated independence calls to divert attention away from its domestic record.

Mr Johnson defended his decision to fly up from London at a time when non-essential cross-border travel is banned. But his mission to defend the Union ran into fresh trouble when Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg repeatedly referred to Miss Sturgeon as 'Moanalot'.

Asked about the jibe, Mr Johnson said: 'I don't want to be distracted by any kind of petty, personal, political issues.'

Polls show a majority in Scotland now favour going it alone, after Scots voted 55 to 45 to remain part of the UK in 2014.

The PM is focusing on the pandemic at the moment which yesterday saw cases continuing to plummet in every English region and among all age groups.

Weekly infections have fallen by nearly a third, while the number of patients in hospital with Covid-19 is decreasing in every NHS region.

Yesterday another 28,680 cases and 1,239 deaths were recorded in the UK, down from 37,892 cases and 1,290 deaths last Thursday.

The country's seven-day infection rate is 346 per 100,000, the lowest figure since December 20 and almost half the peak of 642 on January 4.

All but five local authorities in England saw coronavirus infections fall last week, official data shows in the clearest sign yet that cases are trending downwards across the country during lockdown

All but five local authorities in England saw coronavirus infections fall last week, official data shows in the clearest sign yet that cases are trending downwards across the country during lockdown

The above graph shows the number of people testing positive for the virus. The dark blue bar shows those who tested positive under pillar 2 - tests carried out in the community - and the light blue represents those who tested positive under pillar 1 - swabs in hospitals

The above graph shows the number of people testing positive for the virus. The dark blue bar shows those who tested positive under pillar 2 - tests carried out in the community - and the light blue represents those who tested positive under pillar 1 - swabs in hospitals

The data shows the average number of Covid-19 cases caught on wards has dropped from 553 on January 10 to an average low of 369 on January 25 across England

The data shows the average number of Covid-19 cases caught on wards has dropped from 553 on January 10 to an average low of 369 on January 25 across England

Ministers forced to ditch 'sexist' advert

A government advert on controlling coronavirus was withdrawn last night following a backlash from women.

The controversial 'infographic' urging the public to stay home showed one picture of a woman reclining in a man's arms followed by three images of women looking after children and doing housework.

The only man depicted was relaxing on a sofa. The image, promoted by the Government on Facebook, went viral on social media and attracted a torrent of criticism.

Labour MP and former Cabinet minister Yvette Cooper condemned it as '1950s sexism'.

Ministers have been forced to ditch a 'sexist' advert

Ministers have been forced to ditch a 'sexist' advert

Fellow Labour MP Bridget Phillipson said the message appeared to be trying to put women 'back in their place'.

She added: 'How out of touch can this Government get?' Glamour magazine, which raised concerns over the advert with the Government, described it as 'shocking'.

The Prime Minister's official spokesman made no effort to defend the advert.

'It has been withdrawn and removed from the campaign,' he told reporters.

'I will make clear that it does not reflect the Government's view on women.'

Asked whether the infographic was checked before being produced, the spokesman said: 'We have provided and have produced information throughout the pandemic to try and ensure that we can communicate our key messages, specifically around the importance of staying at home to protect the NHS and to save lives.' 

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The infection rate among over-80s, almost all of whom have now been vaccinated, fell by 26 per cent in the past week.

Daily hospital admissions have fallen steadily for a fortnight. The number of Covid-19 hospital patients is at its lowest level since January 9.

Public Health England's (PHE) weekly infection report said the epidemic shrank in all regions last week. London has the most new cases – 435 per 100,000, down from 658.7 in the previous week.

The West Midlands was next worst at 416. Dr Yvonne Doyle, PHE medical director said: 'We should expect deaths to remain high for some time.'

Hospitals are still under extraordinary pressure, with patient admissions – more than 36,000 – far above the first wave.

But in a glimmer of hope for locked-down Britons, the Covid tiers system could be scrapped after lockdown under plans to ease restrictions on a national basis.

Mr Johnson is looking again at whether the country should go back to a system of regional tiers, which was credited with slowing the spread of the virus but ultimately failed to head off a third national lockdown.

A return to a national system of restrictions would result in a slower release from lockdown, as areas with low numbers of cases would be forced to wait for others to 'catch up' before being allowed to open up.

But some ministers believe that, by removing the risk of transmission from Covid hotspots to other areas, it would be likely to prove more sustainable.

Some also believe it could be less politically divisive than the tiers system, which saw ministers clash with Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham amid claims the North was being locked down to protect the South.

A Cabinet Office taskforce started work yesterday on a new exit plan after Mr Johnson pledged a 'road map' out of lockdown would be published in the week beginning February 22.

It will draw up a series of 'metrics' for easing of different parts of the lockdown, such as vaccination numbers, Covid cases and hospitalisations.

A Public Health England study into the effectiveness of vaccines in slowing transmission of the virus is also said to be critical – as is continuing work on the threat posed by new variants which may be resistant to the vaccines.

The seven-day average of new cases was down by 29.4 per cent yesterday, but hospital numbers remain at a record high and a further 1,239 deaths linked to the virus occurred in 24 hours.

Government sources yesterday denied reports a three-stage plan had been agreed, with schools opening in March, shops in April and the hospitality sector in May. But one source acknowledged it could be 'early summer' before pubs can open their doors again.

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said on Wednesday the Government would 'try to make use of the tiered system' when devising its exit strategy.

But Mr Johnson ducked questions about whether there would be a return to tiered restrictions.

Boris Johnson is looking again at whether the country should go back to a system of regional tiers, which was credited with slowing the spread of the virus but ultimately failed to head off a third national lockdown. Pictured: Oxford Street during England's third lockdown on January 6

Boris Johnson is looking again at whether the country should go back to a system of regional tiers, which was credited with slowing the spread of the virus but ultimately failed to head off a third national lockdown. Pictured: Oxford Street during England's third lockdown on January 6

Johnson ducked questions about whether there would be a return to tiered restrictions during a press briefing on Wednesday (pictured)

Johnson ducked questions about whether there would be a return to tiered restrictions during a press briefing on Wednesday (pictured)

Some believe a return to the national lockdown system - as opposed to a tier system - could be less politically divisive, which saw ministers clash with Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham amid claims the North was being locked down to protect the South

Some believe a return to the national lockdown system - as opposed to a tier system - could be less politically divisive, which saw ministers clash with Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham amid claims the North was being locked down to protect the South

Police could be powerless to stop people flying off on holiday during coronavirus lockdown, top officer warns 

Police may be powerless to stop tourists leaving the country, a top officer suggested yesterday.

Martin Hewitt, chairman of the National Police Chiefs' Council, said forces will carry out extra Covid patrols at airports and ports.

But he suggested officers may not have the power to stop holidaymakers getting on flights. 

He spoke out as figures revealed that just 3 per cent of travellers investigated for flouting self-isolation have been fined.

Of the 11,003 examined so far, only 335 were penalised. The others were either uncontactable or obeyed the restrictions.

Home Secretary Priti Patel announced this week that anyone attempting to holiday abroad will be stopped at the border, sent home and risk a £200 fine. 

Travellers will be expected to fill out a 'declaration' form explaining why they need to go abroad before they leave home which will then be checked by airlines, police and Border Force officers.

Mr Hewitt said yesterday the detail had yet to be worked out, adding he did not expect officers to be able to bar holidaymakers from leaving the country.

The Cabinet Office is to review all travel exemptions to permit them only for the 'most important and exceptional reasons'. 

People will only be allowed to travel for essential work that cannot be done from home or for education, a medical emergency or a bereavement.

Exemptions for hauliers vital to trade and for staff to maintain critical infrastructure, medical, military, diplomatic or scientific work are expected to continue but those for elite sports are being reconsidered.

Some 15,000 people a day are currently entering the UK with all being checked from this week by Border Force and airlines to ensure they have negative Covid tests within 72 hours of departure and locator forms for during quarantine.

Liability for outgoing checks to weed out non-essential travellers will rest with airlines who will face potential £2,000 fines if they fail to do so. 

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And a Government source last night confirmed a rethink was underway. The insider said: 'We do think the tier system was effective for the situation we faced last year, but we may face different circumstances this spring.

'Tiers are still an option but we are also looking at whether it would be better to exit from lockdown on a national basis.

'It will depend to an extent on the geographical spread of the pandemic in a few weeks' time when we will be able to see if there is still value in trying to do things on a regional basis.'

The original tiers system was designed to contain Covid outbreaks within regions and bring them back under control.

But critics said the restrictions had little effect, with large swathes of the North remaining under virtual lockdown for months on end.

Eventually, the tiers also failed to halt the revival of the virus across the country. Even Cornwall, which was the only significant area in Tier One at one point, eventually succumbed.

Local officials blamed the tiers system for outbreaks in the area, with the director of public health saying a 120 per cent rise in case numbers was 'directly related to the relaxing of the restrictions that we had under Tier One in early December.'

The tiers system also proved politically toxic, with Tories in so-called Red Wall seats in the North complaining that it fuelled perceptions that ministers did not care about the North-South divide.

However, a return to national restrictions could see ministers come under intense pressure from MPs in areas with low cases of the disease, whose businesses would have to remain shut.

The starting point for the new road map will be the reopening of schools, which Mr Johnson said this week he 'hopes' will begin on March 8.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson is pushing for a full return on this date and is said to have argued it was safe for all schools to go back immediately after half-term on February 22.

However, contingency plans have been drawn up that would see primary schools return on March 8 but most secondary classes remaining at home, with the exception of those in exam years.

The Cabinet Office taskforce will use the original road map out of the first lockdown as its starting point.

But sources said the speed of the exit could be different this time, with the new variant making the lockdown less effective and Government scientists pushing for an assessment of each phase of unlocking before going ahead with a further easing of restrictions.

Elsewhere models and social media influencers were among thousands of British travellers facing a race home last night to avoid being stranded in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

It came after ministers added the United Arab Emirates to the so-called red list of countries from where travel to the UK is prohibited.

They acted following evidence that the more infectious South African strain of Covid-19 had been detected there. The ban on direct inbound passenger flights from the UAE to Britain into comes into effect at 1pm today.

Yazmin Oukhellou, who appears on TOWIE, told fans she and her boyfriend were '[In Dubai] for work purposes, for business'. She added: 'Obviously we'll make the most of it while we're here as well.'
Laura Anderson, who appeared on Love Island in 2018, was met with a furious backlash recently when she moaned about how hard it was to be an 'influencer'

Hard graft: Yazmin Oukhellou told fans she was, '[In Dubai] for work purposes, for business', but added: 'Obviously we'll make the most of it while we're here as well.' Right, Laura Anderson was met with a furious backlash when she moaned about how hard it was to be an 'influencer'

Chloe Ferry, who travelled out to Dubai at the end of last year - before lockdown measures were introduced, originally claimed she had hoped to stay for 'two months'

Chloe Ferry, who travelled out to Dubai at the end of last year - before lockdown measures were introduced, originally claimed she had hoped to stay for 'two months'

James Lock and his girlfriend Yazmin Oukhellou posed for a snap while lapping up the sunshine in Dubai last week

James Lock and his girlfriend Yazmin Oukhellou posed for a snap while lapping up the sunshine in Dubai last week 

Sheridan Mordew, 24, from Sunderland, arrived in Dubai on January 2, just a few days before the third national lockdown

Sheridan Mordew, 24, from Sunderland, arrived in Dubai on January 2, just a few days before the third national lockdown

Many stars have insisted their trips are for 'work' with the government asking UK residents to avoid unnecessary travel. Pictured: Geordie Shore's Sophie Kasaei in Dubai

Many stars have insisted their trips are for 'work' with the government asking UK residents to avoid unnecessary travel. Pictured: Geordie Shore's Sophie Kasaei in Dubai

Love Island star Georgia Steel was in Dubai but has recently been posting snaps beside crystal blue waters in The Maldives
Molly Mae Hague posted snaps in the Maldvies, but is now back in the UK

Love Island star Georgia Steel (pictured left) was in Dubai but has recently been posting snaps beside crystal blue waters in The Maldives. Pictured right: Molly Mae Hague posted snaps in the Maldvies, but is now back in the UK

Fines for holidays with police checking your passport at the airport 

How can the Government stop Britons from going on holiday?

Lockdown rules already ban people from international travel unless it is for work. Leaving home is only permitted for a small number of reasons. 

Under the lockdown laws introduced at the start of January and which will run until March 31, people in England are allowed only to leave the house for a very slim range of activities. 

But the rules, which are largely the same as for the second lockdown in November, also ban foreign leisure travel, just as they prohibit domestic leisure travel.

What happens if I want to travel abroad?

People wanting to leave the UK will have to fill out a form giving the reason for their trip. 

Anyone who turns up at ports and airports without a valid reason for travel will be directed to return home and may face a fine. 

Priti Patel said today: 'Going on holiday is not a valid reason, so we will introduce a new requirement so that people wishing to travel must first make a declaration as to why they need to travel.

'This reason for travel will be checked by carriers prior to departure.'

Travel operators are also expected to face fines if they fail to inspect these forms. 

What will I have to prove if I went to travel? 

Work trips are allowed, so you will have to show some proof that your flight or sea crossing is vital for your employment.

However, there are a range of other reasons for 'essential travel.

These are the same at the reasons for leaving your house: medical care, to escape harm, compassionate visits -  for example a funeral - and weddings. 

The list of travel exemptions will be urgently reviewed so that only the most important and exceptional reasons are included. 

Who is going to enforce these rules?

It is not clear whether airlines and other travel operators will have the unilateral ability to decide whether someone has given a genuine reason for a trip on their forms, or it will end up being referred to police. There will also be an increased police presence at ports and airports, fining those in breach of the stay at home regulations. 

Why is this being highlighted now?

The Home Secretary lashed out at social media influencers who have been posting images of themselves in sunny parts of the world like Dubai during the lockdown. 

Many have claimed they were travelling for work, but have attracted a backlash from people stuck at home after also enjoying the nightlife and beaches. 

Ms Patel also singled out people 'turning up with their skis' at London's St Pancras station to catch the Eurostar to European resorts, adding: 'That is clearly not acceptable.' 

 

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Up to 10,000 UK residents are thought to be in the country, which is popular with wealthy winter sun-seekers for its luxurious hotels and beaches.

Scores of social media influencers and millionaires have flocked there recently.

Ministers announced the move at 5pm yesterday, giving holidaymakers less than 24 hours to scramble for tickets on the handful of direct flights scheduled to arrive in the UK before the deadline.

Britons will still be allowed to come back on indirect flights. Business trips to the UAE will no longer be considered essential.

Thanks to other rules introduced on Wednesday, adding the UAE to the red list means Britons returning from there face having to quarantine in airport hotels for ten days.

It was still unclear yesterday when this will come into force, but officials are thought to be considering the week beginning February 8.

Arrivals from countries not on the red list will still be required to quarantine, but at home instead. In addition to the ban on direct flights that comes in from 1pm, another set of restrictions came into force today from 4am.

UK residents must self-isolate at home with all members of their household for ten days if they return from the UAE, and non-UK residents are banned from entering Britain if they have been in the UAE within ten days.

The latter does not apply to British, Irish and foreign nationals with UK residence rights.

Former Geordie Shore star Chloe Ferry, 25, is among the scores of influencers who have flocked to Dubai in recent weeks.

Others include Sophia Peschisolido, 23, the daughter of Tory peer Karren Brady, who posted Instagram snaps of herself in Dubai.

Love Island stars such as Laura Anderson, who has since flown back, were also among those to jet off to the Gulf state before the third national lockdown began. One influencer caused fury this week by claiming to be there as an essential worker.

Sheridan Mordew, 24, who has been in Dubai since the start of January, said she was there for an 'essential work trip' to provide sunny content for fans in lockdown and 'motivate them'.

Home Secretary Priti Patel criticised influencers in the Commons on Wednesday as she unveiled the measures for quarantine hotels.

She blasted them for setting a bad example by holidaying in the sun when Britons have been told to stay at home.

The UAE joined the existing red list of 30 countries – mainly in South America and southern Africa – along with Rwanda and Burundi in central Africa.

It could have a much wider impact for British travellers returning from further afield because Abu Dhabi and Dubai are also major international transit hubs. Thousands more planning to travel back from Asia and Australasia will now see onward flights axed.

Asked yesterday what now constitutes essential travel, Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'I think if it's an essential humanitarian reason, if there is a powerful business reason, we can look at specific case by case reasons why people should travel.

'But we're very clear that people should not be travelling abroad to go on holiday, to boost their Instagram profile... for anything other than essential reasons.'

The travel industry warned yesterday that the UAE move raised fears of more countries being added to the red list.

Paul Charles, chief executive of The PC Agency, said: 'The Government will need to be clear on why countries are being added. 'If it grows each week it will sap consumer confidence in future travel.'

The Home Secretary was accused of launching a broadside at Instagram influencers and holidaymakers after being 'humiliated' over her attempts to close the UK border completely to foreign arrivals

Love Island star returns from UK..and is banned for driving after being caught at 101mph 

Love Island star Ellie Brown has been slapped with a six-month driving ban and fined £1,660, after she was clocked speeding at 101mph.

The TV personality, 22, was caught breaking the 70mph speed limit as she drove a Mercedes-Benx GLC on Cudworth, Warwickshire section of the M42 on June 5, 2019.

And as she addressed the bench in Coventry Magistrates Court on Monday, Ellie pleaded that a ban from the road would cause 'exceptional hardship', as her work as an influencer requires her to transport herself all over country.

However, her plea was ultimately rejected, and she received six points on her license, bring her total to 12 and resulting in an automatic six-month ban.

Speeding: The TV personality, 22, was caught breaking the 70mph speed limit as she drove a Mercedes-Benx GLC on Cudworth, Warwickshire section of the M42 on June 5, 2019

Speeding: The TV personality, 22, was caught breaking the 70mph speed limit as she drove a Mercedes-Benx GLC on Cudworth, Warwickshire section of the M42 on June 5, 2019 

Ellie, who appeared on Love Island in 2018, had already plead guilty at an earlier hearing, and the case was adjourned to allow her time to present her case for a potential loss of income, as she works self-employed through an agency.

It was revealed Ellie earns £2,000 a week after tax, and that a driving ban would not result in others losing their jobs, led to the decision to give her the points.

Addressing the bench, she said, according to Metro: 'I have been self-employed for the past two-and-a-half years. I was on a TV show and when I came out I moved to Manchester to do modelling and different kinds of media.

'I do a lot of travelling to shoots and it could be anywhere from London, Scotland, Leeds or all over the UK. My fashion brand's factory is in Leicester and I have to go there carrying a lot of stock.'

Ellie, who moved from Newcastle to Cheshire after her appearance on Love Island, added: 'I've learned my lesson and I haven't had any other offences. I've held my hands up and I'm really sorry.'

Chairman of the bench Neil Gallagher, enquired if her ban would impact jobs at the factory in Leicester, to which she replied: 'The employer, I couldn't work with him because I can't travel to Leicester.'

But after deliberation, the chairman told her: 'Exceptional circumstances is a very high hurdle and I'm afraid in the circumstances we find it does not apply in your case.'

He added: 'You're on a good income at the moment. You have done well but I'm afraid we can't avoid the ban and you will have to make other arrangements to travel around the country.'

At the time she was clocked speeding, Ellie said that she had been severely delayed during a five-and-a-half-hour drive south from Manchester.

As well as receiving six points, Ellie was fined £1,660, ordered to pay court costs of £110 and a victim surcharge of £167.

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Meanwhile health leaders warned social care is in danger of an imminent collapse that also risks 'breaking the NHS'.

Experts believe the failure to reform the crumbling care system is a major reason Britain has suffered Europe's worst death toll.

Of the 103,000 people in the UK who have died from Covid-19, one in three – 31,000 – lived in care homes.

Fifteen medical bodies today join forces to demand Boris Johnson 'drastically overhauls' social care after the broken system was 'brutally exposed' by the pandemic.

The report warns social care spending has fallen by 12 per cent in the past decade, with 1.4million adults missing out on vital support.

This has devastating consequences for the NHS, as vulnerable patients end up in A&E needlessly and become 'stranded' in hospital beds.

Today's report from the Heath for Care coalition warns: 'The Government must fix social care or risk breaking the NHS too.'

The new coalition – which is led by the NHS Confederation and includes the Royal College of GPs, Royal College of Physicians and the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges – said reform cannot be delayed any longer.

Their major intervention comes 18 months after Mr Johnson pledged to 'fix social care once and all' in his first speech as Prime Minister, following a major Daily Mail campaign on the crisis.

But his Government is yet to publish a plan for the sector. The report urges the Government to provide a long-term funding settlement, to extend the eligibility criteria so many more patients can receive support, and to fix the workforce crisis.

Currently there are an estimated 112,000 empty social care posts. The report says: 'Unpaid carers bear the brunt, often at great cost to their own health wellbeing. Free care is tightly rationed and the financial costs can be catastrophic for families.'

Lead author Danny Mortimer, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said: 'When Boris Johnson delivered his first speech as prime minister on the steps of Downing Street 18 months ago, he promised to 'fix the crisis in social care once and for all' but despite decades of delay, the Government has not made any visible or tangible progress on this issue.

'Without social care reform, with a clear and transparent timetable for delivery set out, and backed up by a long-term funding settlement, not only will the NHS and social care continue to run at near breaking point through the pandemic, but they will struggle to address the long-term health and social care issues the pandemic leaves in its wake.'

A Daily Mail campaign, launched 18 months ago, exposed the injustice of how dementia patients have to fork out billions of pounds for care. In England adults are forced to pay the full cost of social care until their assets – including the value of their home – fall below £23,250.

Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patients Association, said: 'The current system creates an enormous disparity between people with some health conditions who are treated for free on the NHS, and others who struggle to access care at all and are charged when they do.'

A Government spokesman said: 'Delivering a care system that is fit for the future, in which people are treated with dignity and respect, remains a top priority and we will bring forward proposals for sustainable improvements to the system later this year.'

But in a boost for parents children could be invited to take part in summer schools under plans to help them catch up on months of missed education.

Ministers are looking at whether to provide funding for catch-up classes over the summer holidays aimed at those children who have fallen furthest behind, the Mail understands.

Most catch-up funding so far has gone to pay for one-to-one or small group tutoring. But Whitehall sources said officials were examining whether a model used by some Harris Academy schools to offer half-day classes last summer could be deployed more widely. The Harris Federation is a trust of 48 schools in London.

Any move to require teachers to work during the summer is likely to meet resistance from unions.

The proposal emerged as it was revealed that next month the Department for Education now expects all schools to close completely during half-term, with even most children of key workers asked to stay at home.

Yesterday Children's Commissioner Anne Longfield warned that it could take some children up to five years to catch up the schooling lost in the pandemic.

Mr Johnson pledged a further £300million in catch-up funding for schools on Wednesday, when he announced that classrooms would stay shut to most pupils until at least March 8. But, in an interview with the Spectator magazine, Mrs Longfield said more support would be needed.

Boris Johnson, pictured in Downing Street yesterday, is said to be planning to ease England's lockdown in three stages

Boris Johnson, pictured in Downing Street yesterday, is said to be planning to ease England's lockdown in three stages

She added that there would be a cohort of children who will need support for the next three to five years 'both in learning but also in that wider socialisation and confidence in their lives'.

She added: 'Yes, there's a catch-up programme, yes there's some mental health support coming. But it's not on the scale of the emergency that we're talking about.'

Government sources acknowledge they face a huge task in helping pupils catch up. Classrooms across England were closed for months during the first lockdown last year and many children faced serious disruption during the autumn. Schools had to close again at the start of this month, with only the children of key workers encouraged to attend.

During the original lockdown last year, they continued working through the Easter holidays to provide classes for the children of key workers. But education sources said they were expected to close their doors completely during half-term next month.

A source said that, unlike last year, parents had other childcare options. Although schools will be encouraged to offer 'some cover' in emergency cases, most children will be expected to stay at home.

'Schools need a break,' the source said. 'Working parents would normally expect to have their children over school holidays.'

Today a report says children should be allowed to do the entire academic year again. The study by the Education Policy Institute think-tank warns teacher assessment of exam grades could mask serious learning losses.

The Education Department's spokesman said it was 'working closely with Ofqual and the sector on arrangements to make sure young people can receive a grade that reflects their hard work.'

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