Care home residents hit by tough Covid restrictions for nearly two years under Boris Johnson’s Government will be able to see more visitors from today.
From this morning, those living in care homes in England will be able to have unlimited visits from family and friends, the Government has said, meaning they will be able to reunite with loved ones they may not have seen for months.
The Government first announced the end to national restrictions on care home visits in November.
However, it then imposed a limit of three named visitors, plus an essential caregiver, when the Omicron variant hit.
These latest relaxing of restrictions coincide with the Prime Minister facing the biggest threat to his political career.
Mr Johnson has faced numerous calls to resign after a series of boozy lockdown parties in Downing Street while the rest of the country was stopped from seeing loved ones.
It also comes on the same day Health Secretary Sajid Javid is to perform an embarrassing U-turn on his plan for mandatory vaccines for NHS and and social care workers.
The strict rules during the cornonavirus pandemic saw heartbreaking scenes for families
Care home residents and the elderly were effectively cut off from the rest of society
The rules were lifted as Boris Johnson fights for his future after a series of lockdown scandals
That about-turn has been prompted by warnings of crippling staff shortages if it was put in place.
The latest care home rules change, announced last week, means there are now no nationally-set restrictions.
Individual homes will however continue to be able to set their own visiting policies.
And while the news has broadly been welcomed, homes currently with outbreaks will not be able to lift restrictions immediately and there are concerns others may continue to restrict visits or not have enough staff to cope with an increase in visitors.
Other changes include care homes only having to follow outbreak management rules for 14 rather than 28 days
Jenny Morrison, co-founder of the campaign group Rights for Residents, says they ‘remain fearful’ for residents in homes which have not followed previous guidance instructing them to relax visiting policies.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid acknowledged care homes have ‘a lot of discretion’ over the rules they set, urging providers to do ‘everything they can to allow as many visitors as they can’.
He said: ‘If a care home needs to act differently because of an outbreak, then that is understandable as long as they are doing everything they can to allow the maximum number of visitors.’
Other changes include care homes only having to follow outbreak management rules for 14 rather than 28 days.
Self-isolation periods will be cut from 14 days to 10 days for those who test positive – with further reductions if they test negative on days five and six.
Isolation periods for those in care following an emergency hospital visit are also being reduced from 14 to 10 days.
And staff will be asked to start using lateral flow tests before their shifts instead of weekly PCR tests from February 16.
Full guidance setting out further details on the changes is yet to be published.
It comes as Britain’s daily Covid cases fell 16 per cent on Sunday to their lowest level in a month and a half — while deaths rose slightly.
Latest Government statistics showed another 62,399 infections were recorded over the last 24 hours, down from 74,799 positive swabs last Sunday.
This marked the lowest daily tally since December 14 when Omicron was taking off across the UK, and the sixth day in a row that infections have dropped week-on-week.
But Sunday’s cases update does not include new infections from Northern Ireland, which has likely slightly skewed the statistics.
Another 85 deaths involving the virus were also recorded on Sunday, up 13 per cent in a week. And in England latest hospitalisations ticked down eight per cent after 1,342 admissions were registered on January 28.
Britain’s Covid outbreak has been gradually ticking downwards since early January, giving ministers the confidence to lift most Covid curbs aimed at limiting the spread of the virus.
Cases did appear to plateau in recent days amid the emergence of a version of Omicron that may be slightly more transmissible (BA.2), but scientists have not raised concerns over the mutant strain.
Expanding the battle against the virus, Britain on Sunday opened its vaccination drive to five and 11-year-olds who are vulnerable to the virus or live with some one who is. Eligible youngsters are being offered two doses.
Sajid Javid ‘SCRAPS plans’ to make Covid jabs mandatory for NHS staff amid fears it could force the health service to sack 80,000 people
Mandatory vaccines for NHS and social care workers are set to be scrapped, it was revealed last night.
The decision to scrap the controversial policy comes amid warnings of crippling staff shortages if the plan was imposed on NHS and social care workers.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid is on Monday expected to meet ministers on the Covid-Operations Cabinet committee to finalise the U-Turn, reported the Telegraph.
The mandatory jab requirement was meant to come into force on April 1, meaning this Thursday would have been the last day staff could book in for a jab. On Friday those without jabs would have faced dismissal warnings and been asked to work out their notice periods until March 31.
But now, ministers are set to scrap the plan amid fears it could force the NHS to sack around 80,000 staff who remain unvaccinated. One in 20 NHS staff – the equivalent of 77,591 people – have still not had their first jab. In London, one in ten staff are unvaccinated.
The Royal College of GPs, the Royal College of Nursing, the Royal College of Midwives had previously called on the Government to extend the deadline to prevent mass shortages in the health service.
Martin Marshall, Chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said compulsory vaccination for health professionals was ‘not the right way forward’.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid is on Monday expected to meet ministers on the Covid-Operations Cabinet committee to finalise the U-Turn
But now, ministers are set to scrap the plan after one in 20 NHS staff – the equivalent of 77,591 people – have still not had their first jab. In London, one in ten staff are unvaccinated
Under the new rules, care home staff, who were required to be double jabbed or lose their jobs in November, are expected to return to work in the sector. After the mandatory vaccination laws came into effect last year, around 40,000 people lost their jobs.
Care home bosses said the government’s indecision over mandatory jabs had ‘devastated our workforce and brought providers to their knees’.
A senior government source told the Telegraph that ministers are U-turning on the mandatory jabs policy because the Omicron variant is much more mild than previous strains.
‘Omicron has changed things,’ the source said. ‘When we first introduced the policy, it was delta that was the dominant variant. That was very high risk in terms of how severe it was.
‘For omicron, while it is more transmissible, all the studies have shown it is less severe. That has changed the conversation about whether mandatory jabs are still proportionate.’
Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: ‘There were always two risks to manage here: the risk of Covid cross-infection in healthcare settings and the consequences of losing staff if significant numbers choose not to be vaccinated.’
Prior to the reported U-turn, NHS managers had been advised they could move unvaccinated medics from the frontline into roles which do not involve direct patient contact.
Bosses wouldn’t have to help staff find ‘suitable alternative employment’ and redundancy payments would not be made to those who are dismissed.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) health watchdog has said it will not take action against hospitals which decide it is safer to keep unvaccinated staff in place.
Mandatory vaccines for NHS and social care workers are set to be scrapped, it was revealed last night. Pictured: Demonstrators march through London to protest against mandatory vaccinations for NHS staff on January 22
A man gets vaccinated at Gunwharf Quays on January 29 in Portsmouth
Last week Mr Javid said the policy was ‘under review’ and he did not want to lose a single worker to the mandate.
He hinted it may be scrapped because Omicron was less severe than Delta, meaning unjabbed workers posed less of a threat to patients.
Meanwhile, NHS chief executive Amanda Pritchard told a board meeting on Thursday that the compulsory jabs policy posed ‘a real element of risk’ to services.
She said that aiming for universal uptake was ‘of course the right’ objective, but added: ‘At the same time, there is a real element of risk in this that local teams are facing and there’s a risk for our national level targets including the expansion of the workforce, particularly in nursing.’
Speaking about the U-turn over mandatory jabs for NHS and social care staff, Nadra Ahmed OBE, who chairs the National Care Association, told the Telegraph: ‘This decision epitomises the lack of foreside by the ministers in choosing to drive the implementation of this policy without producing impact assessment prior to taking it to the vote.
‘Every parliamentarian who voted for it in social care needs to take responsibility for the loss of staff our sector have suffered because of an ill-thought out policy. Social care has been used as a pilot which has devastated our workforce and brought providers to their knees.’
Mike Padgham, chairman of the Independent Care Group for York and North Yorkshire and boss of Saint Cecilia’s Care Services said: ‘It feels like a bit of a slap in the face.
‘I like to think that all those staff that lost their jobs would get them back again, because we need them. It’s what we argued in the beginning – the vaccine was a good thing, but it shouldn’t be mandatory.
‘Common sense seems to have prevailed now, but there’s been a lot of heartache and sleepless nights for people – unnecessarily – in the midst of a pandemic, when we all said at the beginning that this wasn’t the right approach.
‘This just shows that they don’t understand the difference between the NHS and social care sectors and both need to be strong to support each other. ‘
Professor Ted Baker, the CQC’s chief inspector of hospitals in England, told The Sunday Times: ‘NHS services are under enormous pressure with staffing resources critically stretched.
‘We fully recognise there are concerns that the introduction of mandatory vaccination rules risk exacerbating existing staff shortages.
‘New regulations requiring registered healthcare providers to only deploy fully vaccinated staff in patient-facing roles do not supersede other regulatory requirements.
‘Hospital trusts may need to make difficult risk-based decisions in order to determine the safest possible approach in different circumstances.’
Mr Javid has previously expressed his disagreement at NHS workers who are against mandatory vaccination and urged the public to get boosted.
He said: ‘I understand it, and obviously we have to weigh all that up for both health and social care, and there will always be a debate about it.’
Mr Javid said earlier this month it was the ‘duty’ of NHS workers to get the jab in order to protect patients, and insisted that he does ‘not want to see anyone have to walk away from their job’.
‘This is all about patient safety, we know vaccines work, we know that they reduce the risk of you being infected, so it reduces the spread of an infection,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
‘People whether they are in care homes or a hospital bed, they are particularly vulnerable to this virus, it could be fatal. It is our duty to everything we can to protect them.’
The Royal College of Nursing had previously said the move toward mandatory vaccination was ‘an act of self-sabotage’, while the Royal College Midwives warned compulsory vaccines will ‘only see staffing levels fall further’ and have a ‘catastrophic impact’.
And the NHS Confederation, which represents NHS trusts in England, said hospitals’ frontline staff would be pushed out of their roles, leading to ‘more gaps in capacity at a time of intense pressure and patient demand’.
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