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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Dan Bloom & Rachel Sloper

Living with Covid rule changes under new government plan

The Prime Minister has today announced his plan to 'live with Covid' in England.

Rules such as mandatory self-isolation will be axed from Thursday, along with £500 isolation payments and Day One sick pay, and free tests will be withdrawn from April 1 - with a 72-hour limit already in place to stop stockpiling, Mirror Online reports.

Boris Johnson said testing, tracing and isolation cost £2bn in January alone, adding: "Those who would wait for a total end to this war... would be restricting the liberties of the British people for a long time to come."

The SNP hit back, claiming the Prime Minister was "scrambling to save his own skin" from Tory MPs angry about Partygate, while Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said: "This is a half-baked announcement from a Government paralysed by chaos and incompetence.

"It is not a plan to live well with Covid."

Here's what was announced today and what it means for you.

February 21: Testing advice ends in schools

England’s guidance for staff and students in schools to do regular lateral flow testing is being removed immediately.

They may remain for some settings like special schools but details were not immediately available.

Guidance previously said: "Staff and secondary school pupils should continue to test twice weekly at home, with lateral flow device (LFD) test kits, three to four days apart. Testing remains voluntary but is strongly encouraged."

February 21: Limit on how many tests you can get

As of today, you can no longer get more than one box of lateral flow tests in a 72-hour period.

It was previously a 24 hour period. This is to stop a rush of people stockpiling them before April 1, when free tests end (see below).

February 24: Self-isolation laws scrapped

Mandatory Covid self-isolation in England will be scrapped - even if you have the virus - from 12.01am on Thursday, February 24.

The decision will end almost exactly two years of legally-enforced isolation for people who test positive. The legal obligation to tell your employer if you have to self-isolate will also end.

But adults and children will still be advised to stay at home if they test positive.

Between Thursday and the end of March, you'll be advised to isolate for five days as long as you test negative twice, 24 hours apart at the end of that period - as is the case now. New advice (not written yet) will apply from April 1.

February 24: Close contacts no longer have to test or isolate

The government will no longer ask vaccinated or child contacts of Covid cases in England to test themselves for seven days.

It will also remove the legal requirement for unvaccinated close contacts to self-isolate, all from 12.01am on Thursday.

February 24: £500 self-isolation payment scrapped

The £500 self-isolation payment for poor workers with Covid will end from 12.01am on Thursday.

The Test and Trace Support Payment was introduced in September 2020 to help low-wage workers afford to self-isolate for up to 14 days. Unions and Labour are worried its removal will force people to go to work, putting their colleagues at risk of infection.

The medicine delivery service will no longer be available.

February 24: Routine contact-tracing and council powers end

Routine contact tracing will end in England as the UK's infrastructure for dealing with Covid is wound down.

So will a set of domestic laws - the Health Protection (No3) regulations - which gave councils powers to enact closures in their area.

March 24: Sick pay and ESA from day one will end

People who fall ill with Covid will no longer be eligible for immediate 'Day One' sick pay from March 24.

The law will return to how it was before Covid, where you don't get SSP for the first three days you're ill and only get it from Day Four.

The same will happen to Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) which will return from Day One to Day Eight. People will no longer be eligible for ESA if isolating due to Covid.

April 1: Free lateral flow tests for the general public will end

From April 1 the vast majority of people must pay if they want a lateral flow test - even if they have a cough and fever.

No10 has said "spending £2bn a month on free tests is not an effective use of taxpayers’ money at this point".

It’s not known how much lateral flow tests will cost, but No10 is seeking a "regulated market" where each test costs a low single-figure number of pounds. This suggests a box of seven could cost £20-30.

Asymptomatic tests for NHS workers will be made available but not routinely, only as a "surge" effort where there's an outbreak. But they will be available for care home residents. Exact lists of those eligible are being drawn up.

April 1: Free PCR tests will end for the vast majority

The capacity to do hundreds of thousands of 'gold standard' PCR tests a day will be wound down dramatically from April 1 in England.

You'll no longer be able to order a free PCR if you have symptoms and go to a walk-in or drive-through centre, or get it in the post.

There will be some exceptions to this, including the over-80s, the immunosuppressed, and patients on NHS wards. Exact lists of those eligible are still being drawn up.

The network of testing centres is already being scaled back and will continue to be reduced.

April 1: New guidance for workplaces and Covid passes wound down

The legal need for firms to consider Covid-19 in risk assessments will be removed, except if - for example - they are a lab that handles the virus.

The Government will replace the existing set of ‘Working Safely’ guidance with new public health guidance.

The plan says: "Employers should continue to consider the needs of employees at greater risk from Covid-19, including those whose immune system means they are at higher risk of serious illness from Covid-19.

"The Government will consult with employers and businesses to ensure guidance continues to support them to manage the risk of Covid-19 in workplaces."

The plan adds: "From April 1, the Government will remove the current guidance on domestic voluntary Covid-status certification and will no longer recommend that certain venues use the NHS Covid Pass.

"The NHS Covid Pass will remain available within the NHS App for a limited period."

People will continue to be able to access their vaccination status for international travel.

Date TBC: End of mandatory masks on London's public transport

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he expects rules on wearing face coverings on the Transport for London network will be lifted following the Government's announcements.

"Following the Government dropping all legal Covid restrictions, and in light of falling infection levels in London, it is expected that wearing a face covering will no longer be a condition of carriage on the TfL network," he said.

"However, we know that face coverings remain a simple, effective measure that gives Londoners confidence to travel, and following clear advice from public health advisers, TfL will likely continue to recommend their use on the network."

Staying in place: Covid travel rules

Fully-vaccinated people entering the UK do not need to take any Covid tests, under changes that happened on February 11.

But they still need to fill in a Passenger Locator Form - albeit a ‘simplified’ one - and no further changes have been announced today.

It’s understood the Department for Transport was pressing to further simplify the Passenger Locator Form - or get rid of it completely. But this has not yet come to pass.

Meanwhile, unvaccinated people still need to take one pre-departure test and one post-arrival test before entering the UK. It’s understood this rule will stay for the foreseeable future and no changes to it are due this week.

There will be a review of these rules before Easter.

Staying in place: Surveillance and surge powers

Officials said the government will maintain strong domestic surveillance, including the ONS Covid infection survey to spot new variants, and the Siren and Vivaldi studies.

There will also be measures to ramp up testing in the NHS if needed in future. SAGE experts have already warned a new variant could be more deadly than the original form of Covid - rather than less deadly, like Omicron.

From spring: A fourth dose of vaccine for over-75s and the vulnerable

People over 75 and the clinically vulnerable will be offered another Covid jab from the spring.

A second booster jab has been recommended for over-75s by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), which applies to around 7.2 million people.

It will also be offered to around 500,000 immunosuppressed people, some of whom have already had a third dose and a booster.

Anyone eligible can come forward to get another vaccine regardless of whether they have had three of four doses - as long as there has been a six-month gap since their last jab.

Vaccine experts are also planning for a wider booster programme for more of the population in the autumn.

The JCVI said it will confirm which sections of the population would qualify for this nearer the time.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has accepted the recommendations for fourth doses, which is a “precautionary strategy to maintain high levels of immunity”.

The extra spring dose is advised around six months after the last vaccine dose for over-75s, those living in an elderly care home and anyone aged over 12 who is immunosuppressed.

From April: Vaccines for all children over five

All children over five will be able to get vaccinated against Covid-19 from April.

The “non-urgent offer” to the parents of nearly six million five to 11-year-olds was confirmed by the Government moments after advice issued by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI).

Two smaller doses of the Pfizer jab, 12 weeks apart, will be available to this age group to help control future Covid waves after Covid curbs have been lifted.

It is understood there are no plans for a major publicity drive to encourage this age group to be vaccinated and it will be left very much up to parents to decide.

It's understood a rollout for over-fives will be less urgent than previous vaccine drives, due to the very low risk Covid poses to younger kids. The idea is that ordinary NHS care shouldn’t be interrupted to give kids the jab, like it was for adults.

All children over 12 have been able to get the Pfizer Covid jab since September last year.

Currently, only the most vulnerable kids aged five to 11 are eligible. They are offered two jabs but at a lower dose than for adults - 10 micrograms instead of 30.

For more stories from where you live, visit InYourArea.

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