September 28, 2021
2 mins read

England hospitals can ease Covid rules to treat more patients

The new recommendations are also aimed at easing the pressure created by the pandemic on NHS capacity over the next few months…reports Asian Lite News.

Hospitals in England have been given the green light to ease some of the Covid infection-control measures that have been in place during the pandemic.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has recommended 3 pragmatic changes to the current management of COVID-19 IPC measures, with a focus on elective care.

The new recommendations are also aimed at easing the pressure created by the pandemic on NHS capacity over the next few months.

This advice comes as more of the population is vaccinated and therefore protected against COVID-19. This advice should be used by local acute care providers to allow them to start to make further safe changes to their services, in line with a local assessment of risk.

It says testing and isolating patients before planned operations can be dropped and hospitals can return to normal cleaning procedures.

Selected patients in low risk groups who are fully vaccinated, asymptomatic, with a negative lateral flow test on the day of their procedure will no longer need to have a negative PCR and isolate for 3 days. Patients who are contacts of a confirmed case of SARS-CoV-2 will still need to go through the current PCR pathway.

Social distancing can also be reduced from 2m (6ft) to 1m in some areas. This with appropriate mitigations where patient access can be controlled (for example, not in emergency departments). Also, WHO currently advises 1 metre physical distancing in healthcare facilities.

It also recommended to discontinue enhanced cleaning in agreed low risk areas such as planned or scheduled elective care and providers can revert to standard cleaning procedures between patients.

Dr Jenny Harries, UKHSA Chief Executive, said: “We have reviewed the existing COVID-19 IPC evidence-based guidance and made a series of initial pragmatic recommendations on how local providers can start to safely remove some of the interventions that have been in place in elective care specifically for COVID-19.”

“This is a first step to help the NHS treat more patients more quickly, while ensuring their safety and balancing their different needs for care,” he added.

Health and Social Care Secretary, Sajid Javid, said: “As ever more people benefit from the protection of our phenomenal vaccination campaign, we can now safely begin to relieve some of the most stringent infection control measures where they are no longer necessary to benefit patients and ease the burden on hardworking NHS staff.”

ALSO READ-NHS Offers More Career Opportunities

Previous Story

Row Over Minimum Wage Rocks Labour

Next Story

Rugby stars support vaccine roll out

Latest from -Top News

Multi-alignment, upgraded

With US ties strained and China tense, New Delhi taps Europe’s harder edge for co-development, clean tech and strategic autonomy, writes Manoj Menon India is recalibrating its great-power hedging as frictions with

India-EU Trade Deal Breakthrough Soon?

Negotiators report increased momentum in discussions, which have been given a boost from US President Donald Trump’s tariff offensive…reports Asian Lite News India and the European Union aim to finalise a trade

Europe Seeks Peace in Gaza

European countries condemn Israeli interception of Gaza-bound flotilla, demand safety of citizens…reports Asian Lite News Israel’s interception of an international flotilla carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza has sparked condemnation across Europe, with

GAZA: Egypt to Host Peace Talks

Egypt hopes the discussions will help “end the war and the suffering of the brotherly Palestinian people, which has continued for two consecutive years…reports Asian Lite News Egypt will host Israeli and

‘My Injuries Made Me’

During his four-year battle with injury, the incumbent fast bowling spearhead made occasional appearances but couldn’t bear the workload and demands of red-ball cricket….reports Asian Lite News England tearaway Jofra Archer believes
Go toTop

Don't Miss

British scientists develop lab-in-a-backpack for Covid testing

The kit, described in the journal PLOS ONE, is based

Vaccines effective against all variants: PM

Almost 3,000 cases of the coronavirus variant first detected in