The inquiry says an earlier lockdown could have saved 23,000 lives in the first wave in England - and lockdown could have ...
The UK did “too little, too late,” in its early response to the coronavirus pandemic, leading to thousands of more deaths, ...
Baroness Heather Hallett’s latest report has been devastating but it has also reignited questions about cost, duration and ...
30,000 – the number of people in UK who died with Covid in the later Omicron wave, even though most were vaccinated 53 – ...
The Covid Inquiry has attacked Boris Johnson's government for acting far too late, and making the same "inexcusable" mistakes ...
As a damning report finds all four UK governments failed to appreciate the scale of the threat posed by COVID-19 or the ...
The Johnson government's conduct during the outset of the Covid pandemic was summed up in searing fashion with one standout ...
One of its headline findings is that 23,000 fewer people would have died in England during the first wave had the government introduced a lockdown one week earlier, writes Tommy Meskill.
The report says lockdown could have been avoided if steps such as social distancing and isolating those with symptoms along ...
A highly infectious variant of COVID-19 that has spread around the world since it was first discovered in Britain late last year is between 30% and 100% more deadly than previous dominant variants, ...
Mirror Health Editor Martin Bagot says lockdown critics are exactly the people who made full lockdowns both necessary and ...
Baroness Hallet, the inquiry's chair, said the UK and Scottish governments were unprepared for the coronavirus pandemic and lives could have been saved ...
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