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Ministers face calls to end the limbo of “undefined” isolation for the 2.5 million people who protect themselves from the coronavirus, amid claims that the numbers added to the “extremely vulnerable” list have doubled in some areas in the last week.
Labor said it was “deeply alarming” that hundreds of thousands more people have been added to the list of people to be isolated indoors in the past seven weeks, suggesting they were at unnecessary risk by being ignored initially.
The opposition also asked for clarity on how long they would have to put their lives on hold, as government sources said a review of the “extremely clinically vulnerable” state would likely conclude that many in that group would have to continue to isolate themselves over the summer months.
Initially, a group of 1.5 million “clinically extremely vulnerable” people in England were advised to protect themselves by not leaving their homes for 12 weeks, from March 23 to June 15.
This lasted until “late June,” but the government’s coronavirus recovery plan released Monday revealed that it was now “likely that the government will continue to advise people who are clinically extremely vulnerable to the shield beyond June.” The government said this amounted to 2.5 million people across the UK, of whom 2.1 million are in England.
Steve Reed, the secretary of shadow communities and local government, said there had to be an explanation for why so many people were initially off the list.
“The government’s inability to work collaboratively to provide PPE and deployment testing has already put people at risk and now it appears that they left vulnerable people in danger due to their disjointed approach to armoring,” he said.
“People who are currently protecting themselves have been led to believe that they could be asked to isolate themselves for an indefinite period; they deserve clarity from the government on how long they will have to put their lives on hold. “