UK almost ‘flying blind’ on Covid this autumn, experts say

The UK is nearly “flying blind” when it comes to Covid this autumn, experts have said, amid an increase in cases.

Why waste money on public health? – Owl

Nicola Davis www.theguardian.com 

While the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) continues to track some metrics of Covid, including hospitalisation numbers, many of the community surveillance studies tracking infection levels have finished.

Now experts have said the situation is leaving the country in the dark about how Covid may play out in the months ahead.

Christina Pagel, a professor of operational research at University College London, said a new wave of Covid appeared to be under way – possibly driven by waning immunity, new variants of Omicron, and factors including poor weather keeping people inside.

With the autumn coming on and people returning to school and work, Covid pressures may increase, Pagel added.

“We might see the wave continue to grow, and grow faster, in September,” she said.

As well as public health measures including reintroducing high-quality masks within healthcare settings, Pagel said she would support bringing back the nationwide infection survey published by the Office for National Statistics for autumn and winter, as well as expanding it to cover flu and RSV.

Failing that, she said, wastewater monitoring should be reinstated across the UK as a cheaper alternative that is used in many countries to track Covid prevalence and variants. Such schemes have recently been cut in England and Wales.

“What worries me most is if we get a repeat of the last winter NHS crisis this winter again, with Covid, flu and RSV all hitting around the same time,” said Pagel. “We are definitely flying near blind.”

Prof Rowland Kao, an epidemiologist at the University of Edinburgh, also highlighted the decline in surveillance.

“With seasonal flu, we have of course a certain amount of predictability with the many years of data. However, with Covid, now that we don’t have those multiple data streams to rely on, it’s harder to say what is happening [in the general population],” he said.

Kao added that the variant emergence patterns for Covid were largely unknown and Covid was not simply following seasonal patterns.

Experts have also raised concerns about the UK’s vaccination programme as the autumn approaches.

Prof Danny Altmann, an immunologist at Imperial College London, said while Covid was on the rise, it had started from quite a low level and the “mildness” of Covid now was largely because most people were still within a year or so of having had three vaccine doses.

“The immune-evasion mutations continue to emerge and cross-protection is looking ever more precarious. Meanwhile, immunity beyond one year wanes appreciably,” Altmann said, adding it was important to plan for another round of boosters and consider which specific vaccine it should involve.

Prof Adam Kucharski, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said exposure to Covid would also affect the level of population immunity. But he agreed there were uncertainties about how Covid may play out, including whether there will be multiple waves of Covid a year.

“I think we don’t really have enough data points to say confidently what normal looks like for Covid, other than the fact that normal is probably going to be significantly higher infection and disease burden layered on top of all the other things that are already causing us problems every year,” he said.

However Kucharski noted the UK is no longer in the phase of pandemic where rapid actions are being taken – a period when very detailed surveillance was crucial – adding surveillance now is more about understanding vaccine effectiveness, waning immunity, and pressures that drive waves of infection.

“If we go into winter, and it isn’t an [unusual] variant and it isn’t an unusually large wave, then probably some of the surveillance we have will give us the sort of indications we need for a lot of that kind of management,” he said.

“We’re still in that kind of period of uncertainty where we might want the ability to deploy something that can give us more insight in future,” said Kucharski.

Another vaccination campaign, with eligibility based on health conditions or age, is expected to be launched later this year, according to UKHSA. The agency says it understands conversations about scaling up testing are continuing.

Prof Steven Riley, the director general of data, analytics and surveillance at the UKHSA, said protecting the public from Covid-19 remained one of the agency’s top priorities.

“We continue to monitor the threat posed by Covid-19 through our range of surveillance systems and genomics capabilities, which report on infection rates, hospitalisations and the risks posed by new variants.”

Something to look forward to during the dark months ahead….

Could Liz Truss star in this year’s I’m A Celebrity? Now ITV bosses are ‘bidding to sign up former PM’ after Matt Hancock’s controversial run on reality TV show www.dailymail.co.uk 

This comes after various reports that Boris Johnson has been in talks with ITV but is likely to turn down an offer (too busy on he lucrative speaking tour) www.independent.co.uk

Faulty monitors leave sewage spilling into bathing water – South West Water the worst

Analysis of Environment Agency data by the Liberal Democrats revealed that South West Water was the worst water company in absolute terms, responsible for 31 of the total 112 faulty monitors on storm overflows at bathing waters.

Simon Jupp spins like a top as he plays catch up with public opinion

In October 2021 Johnson’s Conservative government, with the votes of Simon Jupp and Neil Parish, succeeded in voting down a Lords amendment designed to stop private water companies from dumping raw sewage into the UK’s waterways. The amendment would have placed a legal duty on companies “to make improvements to their sewerage systems and demonstrate progressive reductions in the harm caused by discharges of untreated sewage.

In January 2023 Simon Jupp started spinning his voting record when he said, rather archly, that he “would never vote to pollute our water”. 

In March 2023 Simon Jupp, chairing a Westminster Hall debate on the performance of South West Water, said: …Of course, in a perfect world, we would stop sewage spills completely and immediately. Sadly, that is virtually impossible in the short term; because of the pressure on our water infrastructure, we would risk the collapse of the entire water network, and the eye-watering costs involved mean we would need not just a magic money tree, but a whole forest.

By June 2023 Simon Jupp had obviously changed his mind when he said he wanted to see action.

In July Simon Jupp said: “I’m working with Ofwat & @EnvAgency to get South West Water to clean up their act & our water

Later in July Simon Jupp met with South West Water’s Chief Executive, Susan Davy, in Sidmouth urging South West Water to move swiftly on their £30 million investment plans for water infrastructure in Sidmouth & Tipton St John.

Little wonder South West Water seem to take no notice of him – Owl

Faulty monitors leave sewage spilling into bathing water

Adam Vaughan www.thetimes.co.uk

More than a hundred monitors tracking sewage spills at bathing waters around England were faulty last year, meaning people may have been unwittingly swimming in polluted seas.

Analysis of Environment Agency data by the Liberal Democrats revealed that South West Water was the worst water company in absolute terms, responsible for 31 of the total 112 faulty monitors on storm overflows at bathing waters. United Utilities, which serves the northwest of England, was second on 21, and Northumbrian Water was third at 21.

A monitor is considered faulty if it works less than 90 per cent of the time.

Northumbrian Water was the worst offender in relative terms, with more than 20 per cent of its monitors not functioning last year. It was followed by Anglian Water on 14.6 per cent and South West Water on 11.9 per cent.

The government has pushed to have monitoring increased on storm overflows.

The pipes are designed as emergency relief valves in the sewer network to spill raw sewage into rivers and seas at times of heavy rainfall to stop it backing up into homes and businesses.

Despite the government drive, the number of faulty monitors at designated bathing waters was up 27 per cent last year on the 88 in 2021.

The analysis shows that in some places monitors remained broken for a protracted period of time. A total of 52 at swimming spots were faulty in both 2021 and 2022, which the Lib Dems said showed “water firms’ negligence in their infrastructure”.

At Seaford in East Sussex, where beaches were hit by raw sewage spills during last August’s summer holidays , sewage monitors run by Southern Water were broken for the whole of 2021.

At neighbouring Newhaven Beach, they have been faulty for two years.

“This is a national scandal. These profiteering firms have been too busy stuffing their pockets instead of fixing basic infrastructure.

“With all these broken monitors, we have no idea just how much sewage people are swimming in. As millions of people flock to the beach this month, we need these monitors fixed immediately,” Tim Farron, the Lib Dem environment spokesman, said.

Water companies have a legal obligation to ensure all of the almost 15,000 storm overflows across England have monitoring in place by the end of the year. In March the Times revealed that monitoring was still not in place at more than 600 sites , though that figure will have now fallen dramatically.

The Times’ Clean It Up campaign has been calling for stronger regulation and faster investment by water companies to improve the nation’s rivers and seas. Only 14 per cent of rivers in England are considered by the Environment Agency to meet good ecological status.

Dozens of beaches around the UK have a sewage spill alert in place following heavy rainfall. The warnings on the Surfers Against Sewage map range from Summerleaze beach at Bude in Cornwall to Hunstanton beach in Norfolk.

The vast majority of bathing waters at English beaches meet minimum water quality standards , with 302 rated excellent last year, 87 good and 18 sufficient. Just 12 were considered poor. However, there are concerns that some sites could be downgraded. Local officials in Portsmouth recently warned that Southsea East beach could become considered unsuitable for swimming, partly over concerns about seagull droppings .

A spokesperson for the trade body Water UK said: “[The economic regulator] Ofwat has confirmed that 92 per cent of monitors worked correctly last year; however, given the speed of installation, 8 per cent of monitors did not report reliably.

“This particularly occurred where mobile phone reception, which is needed to transmit results, proved patchy. Companies have been working to fix this, and the regulator has taken new powers to levy steep financial penalties if reliability does not improve.”

A South West Water spokesperson said: “With one-third of the UK’s bathing waters, we have focused on achieving 100 per cent monitoring across all of our storm overflows, and achieved that last year, ahead of plan.”

A government spokesperson said: “Where faulty or inactive monitors are identified by the Environment Agency, they are then investigated further, and we will hold water companies to account to deliver that.”

Exmouth and Sidmouth preparing for Storm Antoni this weekend

The floodgates at some East Devon towns will be closed this weekend, as a yellow weather warning has been issued for East Devon. 

Adam Manning www.sidmouthherald.co.uk

The floodgates will be closed at Mamhead Slipway (Exmouth) from 5pm on Friday, (August 4) until Sunday morning. Sidmouth’s floodgates will be closed from Saturday, (August 5), morning until Sunday morning.

STORM Antoni is set to bring strong winds to Devon tomorrow (Saturday, August 5), according to the latest Met Office forecast.

A weather warning for strong wind was already in place, but an updated one now, in place from 8am to 8pm, said: “Storm Antoni will bring unseasonably windy weather to southern parts of the UK.”

This weekend you can expect

  • Injuries and danger to life from flying debris are possible
  • Some damage to buildings, such as tiles blown from roofs, could happen
  • Road, rail, air, and ferry services may be affected, with longer journey times and cancellations possible
  • Some roads and bridges may close
  • Power cuts may occur, with the potential to affect other services, such as mobile phone coverage
  • Injuries and danger to life could occur from large waves and beach material being thrown onto sea fronts, coastal roads, and properties