Executive to meet to discuss potential post-Christmas restrictions

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Robin Swann will lay out proposals on Thursday.

by PA Media and Q Radio News

The Executive is to meet later on Thursday to discuss potential post-Christmas interventions to try and curb the continuing spread of Covid-19.

It comes as the health minister warned that Northern Ireland requires “extreme and robust” coronavirus restrictions to halt the spread of the virus.

Robin Swann will seek the backing of fellow ministers for new Covid-19 measures when ministers discuss the proposals.

Mr Swann declined to be drawn on Wednesday whether he would be recommending an intervention before or after Christmas.

“I can say we will be looking for extreme and robust interventions to get us back into a place where we should be,” he said.

(L-R) Health Minister Robin Swann, Sister Joanna Sloan of the Belfast Trust and Jennifer Welsh of the Northern Trust

Some restrictions were lifted last Friday including the reopening of some hospitality and close-contact services.

Deputy First Minister Michelle O’Neill signalled that she will support whatever is brought forward by Mr Swann and public health advisers, insisting it was important to make the “right decision” and “not the popular one”.

Ms O’Neill said there was “no doubt” an intervention was required.

“Christmas will be here next year also, it is a very difficult time, it is a very difficult decision to make as political leaders, sometimes you have to do the right thing, not the popular thing and in my mind what we need to do is whatever is right to keep people safe and to save lives,” she said.

“I am up for doing whatever is required, so I’ll work with Executive colleagues tomorrow to try and arrive at a position that actually delivers that.”

First Minister Arlene Foster said she did not think Mr Swann would recommend new restrictions for the period prior to Christmas.

“I don’t think he will be proposing closing down before Christmas but we will of course look to see what Robin and his team of advisers have to say to us, I don’t want to prejudge what he is going to say to us tomorrow but we are in a serious situation,” she said.

“Unfortunately the last two weeks don’t appear to have brought the R number down below 1, there is a diminishing return in terms of restrictions, people are out and about now and so there is a very great need for people to have personal responsibility.”

Mrs Foster and Ms O’Neill earlier participated in a call with other devolved leaders in the UK about plans for allowing more household mixing for five days over Christmas.

The leaders are facing intensifying calls to rethink the Christmas relaxations amid fears they could trigger a major spike in cases in January.

Case numbers continue to rise in Northern Ireland despite a recent two-week circuit-break.

Health chiefs have cited low compliance with the lockdown measures as a reason infections, hospital admissions and death rates remain relatively high.

A further eight Covid-19 related deaths were announced on Wednesday, along with 510 new cases of the virus.

Hospital capacity across the region stood at 105% on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, queues of ambulances were witnessed at accident and emergency departments (EDs) across Northern Ireland as patients were treated in car parks due to a lack of capacity inside the hospitals.

Jennifer Welsh, chief executive of the Northern Trust said she was 'extremely concerned' at the current Covid-19 situation

At one point outside Antrim Area Hospital, 17 ambulances containing patients were lined up outside the ED.

Leading medic and chair of the British Medical Association in Northern Ireland, Dr Tom Black says it will be a 'nightmare' six weeks for healthcare staff.

CEO of the Northern Trust, Jennifer Welsh says Covid restrictions and pre-existing staffing problems coupled with workers self isolating - is taking a toll . 

She fears what lies ahead as we approach what is always a difficult time for the NHS. 

Mr Swann told his weekly Stormont media briefing that the region faced some “very dark hours” before the full rollout of the vaccine delivered relief from the virus.

“Its threat will hang over all our Christmases and will cast a shadow well into January,” he said.

“We are once again at a really critical period. Our hospitals, our wider health and care system are already under immense pressure and there are growing fears that January could be much worse.”

He added: “Decisive action is required. People will look to the Executive for what I believe will be a robust intervention and rightly so.”

Asked if the Executive had eased circuit-breaker restrictions too soon, Ms O’Neill said: “We followed the public health advice the whole way through, I wouldn’t have done anything unless it was supported by the chief medical officer and chief scientific adviser and that will be the position again tomorrow.

“But I would make a strong case that we clearly need an intervention, it’s the timing of when that can be most effective that we need to consider, but I don’t think there is any doubt that an intervention is required.”

Mrs Foster and Ms O’Neill both expressed concern at pressures on the health service.

“It’s not where we want to be, and of course we always have winter pressures this time of the year, but Covid-19 has exacerbated that,” Mrs Foster said.

Ms O’Neill added: “It is totally unacceptable that people are being cared for in the back of ambulances but that shows you our health service is under huge pressure so it is very clear to me that what we need is to have an intervention, what that looks like we will discuss at the Executive tomorrow.”

Northern Ireland’s leaders spoke to media separately during a visit to Newry on Wednesday to support the Black Santa appeal.

John Dalzell, 79, stages a sit-out in the city centre every Christmas to raise money for the Southern Area Hospice.

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