Further Coronavirus Restrictions to be Imposed

The government announced yesterday that further restrictions will be imposed to combat the spread of the more transmissible Omicron variant of Covid-19. It is hoped that slowing the spread of the virus will allow time for boosters to be administered to the eligible population. 

These restrictions include:

From Friday 10th December 2021, face masks will be extended to most public spaces, including places of worship, theatres, live music venues and cinemas. There will be exemptions in venues where it is not practical to wear one, such as when eating, drinking, or exercising. For this reason, face masks will not be required in hospitality settings. 

From Monday 13th December 2021, all employees should work from home where possible. 

From Wednesday 15th December, vaccine passports will become mandatory for over 18s in crowded settings such as nightclubs, unseated venues of more than 500 indoors, unseated venues of over 4,000 outdoors, and any venue of more than 10,000. Two jabs (not a booster) are required for a Covid pass. A negative lateral flow test from the last 48 hours or a vaccine exemption will also be accepted. 

Soon, those informed they have been in contact with someone with the omicron variant will be able to undergo daily testing instead of a 10-day isolation to minimise disruption.

Moving forwards, the four key factors which will be used to determine restriction levels are the efficacy of vaccines, the severity of omicron, the speed of spread, and the rate of hospitalisations. 

This data will be monitored and reviewed continuously, and restrictions will be lowered when it is evident that the booster rollout can hold back omicron. The incoming restrictions will be reviewed after three weeks. 

The full government guidance will be released in the coming days.

Non-governmental guidance which you may find useful when making changes to your workplaces can be found here:

Please get in touch with the Chamber Policy Team on [email protected] if you have any queries or feedback on the changes. 

Niamh Corcoran

Policy Advisor

@NEEChamberNiamh

Photo by Tai’s Captures on Unsplash

New Report Reveals Devastating Inequalities Faced by Northern Children

A major new report, Child of the North, produced by the Northern Health Science Alliance (NHSA) and N8 Research Partnership outlines the inequalities faced by children growing up in the North post-pandemic compared to those in the rest of the country.

Over forty leading academics from across the North of England wrote of the wide range of factors disproportionately impacting our children, including increased chances of poverty, obesity, being in care, and death under the age of one. Children of the North were lonelier throughout the pandemic, and they also missed more schooling throughout this time, which will cost an estimated £24.6 billion in lost wages over lifetime earnings, while the mental health conditions they developed during the pandemic could cost them an additional £13.2 billion. The North also faced more cuts to spending on Sure Start children’s centres — a shocking £412 per eligible child on average, compared to only £283 in the rest of England. In addition, the one in five children who are from an ethnic minority in the North are more likely to live in deprived areas than children from ethnic minorities elsewhere.

The North East stats:

  • The North East has the highest child poverty rate before housing costs at 30% and the 2nd highest after housing costs at 37%
  • Between 2011/12-13/14 and 2017/18-19/20, the child poverty rate increased by 11% in the North East (compared to 3% for the UK as a whole)
  • Almost half of Middlesbrough’s local authorities (48%) are among those with the 10% highest child poverty rates nationally. This is the highest proportion nationally. Hartlepool follows with 43%, which is the 3rd highest nationally
  • By the 2nd half of the autumn 2020 term, pupils in the North East experienced 4.0 months learning loss in primary maths (compared to less than a month in the South West and London) and a 2.0 month loss in reading (the greatest in the country)
  • Children in the North East are most likely to be eligible for Free School Meals (27.5%)
  • Prevalence of low and very low household food security was 11% in the North East (compared to 6% in the South East and 8% in England as a whole) and when marginal food security is considered, the prevalence rises to 18% (compared to 11% in the South East and 14% for England as a whole)
  • The North East is the region with the highest persistent overall rates of children in care
  • The North East has the highest under 18s conception rate
  • The North East has the highest prevalence of obesity at age 17
  • Domestic abuse rates are highest in the North East, where the rate is 19 per 1,000 population (almost double the London rate)

As a result, children growing up in the North “get a bad deal” with worse outcomes “across the board” says David Taylor Robinson, who is co-lead author of the report and Professor of Public Health and Policy at the University of Liverpool, and yet these inequalities are preventable. Kate Pickett, another co-lead author and Professor of Epidemiology at the University of York, states that levelling up the North should be just as much about creating opportunities for children as it is about infrastructure, and that “investment in children creates high returns and benefits for society as a whole.”

This includes “high returns and benefits” for the economy, with the report explaining that the well-known ‘productivity gap’ between the North and the rest of England, which costs the UK around £44bn a year and is predicted to grow, has its origins in poor health care. In essence, the relatively poor health care in the North has a profound impact on child health and development, which then impacts these children’s ability to grow up to be healthy, productive adults in the future, and the pandemic has exacerbated this. Previously, a 2018 ‘Health for Wealth’ report found that improving health in the North would reduce the regional gap in productivity by 30% and generate an additional £13.2 billion in UK GDP.

The authors put forward a large set of recommendations which aim to tackle the inequalities suffered by Northern children over the course of the pandemic, which includes urging the government to invest in early years services and other welfare, health and social care systems that support children’s health, particularly in the most deprived areas and areas most affected by the COIVD-19 pandemic. They state the need for greater support for children’s educational development in the post-pandemic years in order to ‘make-up’ for lost development of both cognitive and non-cognitive skills. The UK is already ranked as one of the lowest (169 out of 182) for its ability to deliver on key areas of children’s rights, prompting the report to advocate for children’s rights to be placed at the heart of COVID-19 recovery plans.

As for what the report says businesses can do to help, they encourage local businesses to pay staff the Living Wage, get involved in multi-component employment interventions to decrease unemployment among young people, and connect with and support educational establishments. The report states that “schools can help businesses to engage and understand places and their people, and help our businesses and enterprise initiatives target investment more effectively, and thereby drive social mobility.”

Read the NHSA and N8 Research Partnership’s full report here and their summary here.

Freya Thompson

Knowledge and Research Executive

@NEEChamberFreya

Photo by Michał Parzuchowski on Unsplash