THE UK's chief medical officers have advised that the covid-19 alert level should be raised.
Chief medical officer for England, Professor Chris Whitty; chief medical officer for Northern Ireland, Dr Michael McBride; chief medical officer for Scotland, Dr Gregor Smith; and deputy chief medical officer for Wales, Dr Chris Jones issued their statement on Monday, September 21.
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They said: "The Joint Biosecurity Centre has recommended that the covid-19 alert level should move from Level 3 (A covid-19 epidemic is in general circulation) to Level 4 (A covid-19 epidemic is in general circulation; transmission is high or rising exponentially).
“The CMOs for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have reviewed the evidence and recommend all four nations of the UK should move to Level 4.
“After a period of lower covid cases and deaths, the number of cases are now rising rapidly and probably exponentially in significant parts of all four nations.
"If we are to avoid significant excess deaths and exceptional pressure in the NHS and other health services over the autumn and winter everyone has to follow the social distancing guidance, wear face coverings correctly and wash their hands regularly.
"We know this will be a concerning news for many people; please follow the rules, look after each other and together we will get through this.”
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