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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Luke O'Reilly

Anyone with cold or flu will soon be asked to self-isolate, UK's Chief Medical Officer says

Chris Whitty, Chief Medical Officer for England, is set to be grilled by MPs over the coronavirus outbreak in the UK (Picture: REUTERS)

Anyone with a cold, flu or a fever is likely to soon be asked to stay at home in self-isolation, England’s chief medical officer has said.

Professor Chris Whitty said the number of cases in the UK is going up and pointed to tighter measures aimed at protecting the public, particularly the vulnerable and elderly.

It comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson told reporters the UK will almost certainly move to the delay phase of tackling coronavirus.

Mr Johnson said he believed the UK could rise to the challenge posed by coronavirus.

Prof Whitty said: “We are now very close to the time, probably within the next 10 to 14 days, when the modelling would imply we should move to a situation where everybody with even minor respiratory tract infections or a fever should be self-isolating for a period of seven days.”

He added: “While it is absolutely critical in managing the spread of this virus that we take the right decisions at the right time based on the latest and the best evidence, so we mustn’t do things which have no or limited medical benefit, nor things which could turn out actually to be counter-productive, there is no hiding from the fact that the coronavirus outbreak will present significant challenges for the UK just as it does in other countries.

“But if we continue to look out for one another, to pull together in a united and national effort, I have no doubt that we can and will rise to that challenge.”

Fears over the coronavirus epidemic on Monday caused prison riots in Italy, sent global stock markets and oil prices plunging, and caused a cascading shutdown of sites and events ranging from Saudi schools to Poland's annual Holocaust remembrance march.

In Beijing, white-collar workers returned to their jobs as new infections subsided in China.

However, 16 million people under a widespread lockdown in northern Italy have been left struggling to navigate the new rules of their mass isolation.

Global oil prices suffered their worst percentage losses since the start of the 1991 Gulf War, and US stocks plunged so quickly in the first few minutes after markets opened that it triggered a 15-minute halt in trading.

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