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Johnson, 55, started by expressing his gratitude to the country’s National Health Service (NHS) for “getting him back” to work after hospitalization with COVID-19, as well as a “much happier” hospital visit on Wednesday, when his fiancee Carrie Symonds gave birth to their baby boy.
He then went on to promise to table a comprehensive plan for the next phase in the pandemic fightback and unlocking the economy over time.
“I can now confirm that we are past the peak of this disease and we are on the downward slope, and we have so many reasons to be hopeful for the long term,” Johnson said.
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Johnson also paid a “tribute” to his Indian-origin finance minister Rishi Sunak for laying out a range of measures to help struggling businesses cope through the economic lockdown and expressed confidence that the UK economy would “bounce back” from the crisis.
As he released the death toll figure from COVID-19 as 26,711, a rise of 674 deaths from the previous day across hospitals and in the wider community, Johnson also highlighted that the number of hospitalizations and intensive care admissions from the deadly virus had continued their downward slide.
It means that the rate of infection, referred to as ‘R’, has been “decreasing” but it needs to be kept down by maintaining the social distancing norms in place.
“I will be setting out a comprehensive plan next week to explain how to get our economy moving but without risking a second spike of the disease We will need to beat this by our resolve and ingenuity as we come out of the lockdown but continue to suppress the disease,” he said.
The UK Prime Minister said his comprehensive plan will cover three things about how to restart the economy, how to get children back to school, and how to get people into work.
He reiterated the five key tests already set out by the UK government for the lockdown to be gradually lifted first, to protect the NHS and its ability to cope; second, a sustained fall in deaths; third, the infection rate falling; fourth, address challenges of testing and personal protective equipment (PPE); and, fifth, ensure there is no second peak that could overwhelm the NHS.