Britain’s daily Covid deaths more than quadrupled in a week today, official figures show — but the rise is likely due to a recording lag from the bank holiday last week.
Health chiefs have registered another 209 Covid fatalities in the past 24 hours compared to just 50 recorded last Tuesday.
But the number of fatalities recorded the same time seven days ago was unusually low after the public holiday. On the previous two Tuesdays health officials registered another 173 and 170 deaths.
The Department of Health update revealed that 1,000 people were hospitalised with the virus across the UK on September 1, marking the second time there have been four-figure admissions in a week.
The update — which often includes backlogged hospital data due to the way it is recorded — showed there were a further 988 admissions on September 2 and 905 on September 3.
Covid infections have risen by 16 per cent in a week after another 37,489 cases were detected within the last 24 hours.
It comes after schools minister Nick Gibb insisted that parents will ‘always’ be asked whether they consent to their children getting the Covid vaccine, as he sought to reassure families amid reports children as young as 12 will be able to overrule their parents as part of a secondary-school jabs roll out.
Professor Chris Whitty and the other chief medical officers are currently weighing up whether to offer jabs to 12 to 15-year-olds, after the Government’s vaccine advisers said the shots only offered a marginal benefit to their health.
Professor Whitty — who said over summer he would be in favour of jabbing kids to prevent more school closures — is expected to OK the move on Friday.
Ministers have made no secret of the fact they want to inoculate the age group, with the NHS ordered to have plans ready to roll out the doses from last week.
A SAGE adviser today warned it was already too late to jab children because they should have been inoculated over the summer before classrooms reopened.
Mr Gibb told the Education Select Committee: ‘The consent from parents will always be sought before the child is vaccinated in the school.
‘(But) in some circumstances, and it is rare, children can consent themselves if they are competent to do so. The people administering vaccines in schools are aware of these sensitive issues.’
He added that the vaccines would be rolled out in schools if approved, telling MPs: ‘Yes that is the intention, that the School Age Immunisation Service will deliver these vaccinations through the schools.
‘It is the swiftest and most efficient way of delivering the vaccination programme, as with other vaccination programmes for that age group.’
If approved, children are expected to be offered either the Pfizer or Moderena jabs in schools.
Scientists are divided over whether 12 to 15-year-olds should get the Covid vaccine, with some SAGE members backing the move yesterday arguing it would help to head off a surge in infections later this winter.
But others have argued it would be ethically dubious to inoculate the age group when millions of people in poorer countries are still waiting to be vaccinated.
His comments add to confusion over whether children will be able to overrule their parents to get the vaccine.
Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi said on Sunday that 12 to 15-year-olds would be able to get the jab against their parents wishes.
He said: ‘What you essentially do is make sure that the clinicians discuss this with the parents, with the teenager, and if they are then deemed to be able to make a decision that is competent, then that decision will go in the favour of what the teenager decides to do.’
Mr Zahawi added that if jabbing 12 to 15-year-olds was recommended by Britain’s medical officers it was ‘absolutely’ the right thing to do.
And Dr David Strain, a British Medical Association chief, also called for them to be able to overrule their parents to get the jab.
Dr Strain, who is also clinical lead for Covid services at the Royal Devon & Exeter NHS Foundation Trust, told LBC Radio: ‘A lot of children aged 12 have enough maturity in order to make a decision themselves, although it’s not the same for every child.
‘Doctors and nurses are trained to be able to evaluate them and deem them competent.’
But experts warn clinicians may be ‘reluctant’ to give children jabs without parental consent because the Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunisations (JCVI) has not recommended them for the age group.
The associate professor of family law at Oxford University, Lucinda Ferguson, told The Telegraph yesterday: ‘In my view the clinician may well be reluctant to accept that because alongside that, you have now got the JCVI saying that they don’t consider it to be essentially in the medical best interests of children more generally.
She added: ‘At least at this stage wold be reluctant to accept that that consent (from a child) is good enough because of course if you treat a child without informed consent, either from them, or from a parent with parental responsibility, it is technically battery and that would be what would be concerning the clinician.’
‘Professor Lockdown’ told a live conference yesterday that a decision from Professor Whitty and the other chief medical officers was expected by Friday.
Several SAGE members have already said they are in favour of vaccinating the age group to keep infections at bay in schools.
Professor John Edmunds, who is an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that children should have been jabbed over the summer holidays.
He told The Times: ‘Even if we started (vaccinating all teenagers) immediately it’s not going to have much of an impact on the epidemiology in the next couple of months because they will only get a single dose and one dose isn’t terribly effective at preventing infection with the Delta variant.
‘The biggest lever we could have pressed was to have vaccinated schoolchildren but we should have done it before they went back to school.
‘In the last six weeks we haven’t really taken any action to prevent things taking off in the autumn, and that’s a shame.’