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UK Govt Considers Banning Sporting Fixtures

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The UK government is considering banning sporting fixtures amid the coronavirus outbreak – but it will not happen immediately.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the UK will move to the “delay” phase of its plan to tackle the virus.
There have been 596 confirmed cases across the UK, and 10 deaths.
“We are considering banning major public events like sporting fixtures,” said Johnson.
“The scientific advice is this has little effect on the spread – but it does place a burden on other public services.”
Johnson added: “We are guided by the science; there is no medical reason at the moment to ban such events.
“We are not saying no to that sort of measure, we are keeping it up our sleeves. But it is very, very important in order to maximise our interventions that we get the timing right.”
Chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said cancelling sporting events is not a “major way to tackle this epidemic”.
“Of course there is a risk,” he said. “But on average one person infects two or three others.
“You therefore have a very low probability of infecting a large number of people in a stadium, or a rather higher probability of infecting people very close to you, and that means most of the transmission tends to takes place with friends and colleagues in close environments, not in the big environments.
“It is true that any cancellations of things can have some effect (but) if you then get a displacement activity, when everyone congregates somewhere else, you may have perversely an increased risk, particularly in an indoors environment.
“So it doesn’t mean you should at some point make the decision for the resilience point that has been discussed, but this is not a major way to tackle this epidemic.
“The major ways are to try and reduce and delay the transmission across households and people who have become infected and that why that is the concentration of the first actions.”

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