UK Minister Backs Reduced COVID-19 Isolation Period, to Ease Workforce Pressure
TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Reducing the self-isolation period for people who test positive for COVID-19 from seven days to five would help British workforces that have been hard hit by absences, Education Minister Nadhim Zahawi said on Sunday.
The Omicron variant is still spreading in Britain and many businesses, schools and hospitals are struggling with staff shortages, fuelling calls for the rules on isolation after a positive test to be reduced further.
Last month, health authorities in the United States shortened the recommended isolation time with asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 to five days from the previous guidance of 10 days.
"I would obviously always defer to the scientific advice on this. It would certainly help mitigate some of the pressures on schools, on critical workforce and others," Zahawi told Sky News after being asked whether he backed a move to five days.
He said the UK Health Security Agency was reviewing the length of the isolation period and that the government was doing all it could to make sure the stretched health service could operate during what he called "a rocky few weeks".
On Saturday, Britain's official death toll in the pandemic rose above 150,000, following a record wave of cases caused by the Omicron variant - a stark number that prompted Prime Minister Boris Johnson to renew his call for people to get vaccinated.
Looking forward, Zahawi said he hoped Britain would become one of the first countries to learn to "live with" COVID-19, seeing the pandemic become endemic.
"I hope we will be one of the first major economies to demonstrate to the world how you transition from pandemic to endemic," he said.
Zahawi, who was Britain's vaccine minister before being appointed education secretary, said he did not recognize a report in The Sunday Times that the government was planning to end the free mass supply of lateral flow tests.
Reuters reported in October that the government was aiming to be ready to start charging for some previously free COVID-19 tests to try to rein in spending.