Derbyshire health chief's worries that people tiring of Covid rule changes will lead to rise in cases

A leading Derbyshire health chief has warned of increasing signs that people are ‘getting fatigued with the rules’ over Covid-19.
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And Dean Wallace, director of public health for Derbyshire County Council, added that ‘if we don’t stop some of this now we are in for a really bad winter’.

Mr Wallace was speaking after cases in the county rose again, as they have across much of the UK.

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That has led to the Government introducing a raft of new measures, including pubs and restaurants closing at 10pm and the new rule of six imposed.

Health chiefs are concern people getting fatigued with changing Covid-19 rules could lead to a rise in casesHealth chiefs are concern people getting fatigued with changing Covid-19 rules could lead to a rise in cases
Health chiefs are concern people getting fatigued with changing Covid-19 rules could lead to a rise in cases

Other areas of the UK have seen local lockdowns imposed and Mr Wallace warned that unless people heeded the new rules, the same could happen in parts of Derbyshire as cases start to rise.

Of particular concern is High Peak, which has seen a sharp rise in cases in the last week – more than anywhere else in the county.

Mr Wallace said: “Derbyshire county is following the national pattern, is on the same trajectory as the national picture but with a slower rate of infection. Derbyshire is big, if you divide it down into its districts you see a lot of variation.

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“High Peak is trending higher and above the national average, whereas the Derbyshire Dales is lower.

“We are concerned about the High Peak and specifically the area around Glossop area.

"There are a sporadic number of cases there that are not easily linked together.

“It could be community spread and could be linked to travel.

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"We are also seeing cases in the Buxton area increase in rates.”

In the week from September 18 to September 24 there were 55 cases by 100,000 people in High Peak, 48 in Amber Valley, 27 in Erewash and 17 in Chesterfield.

Overall, there have been 824 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Derbyshire (including Derby) in the first three weeks of September.

Just under a quarter of these were in the Derby (205) with Amber Valley seeing the most new cases (115), followed by the High Peak (101).

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Mr Wallace stressed that there was still time for residents to turn the situation around and areas like High Peak could avoid local lockdown but this must happen fast and social distancing, face mask and hand hygiene measures need to be consistently followed.

He added that the recent announcements from the government’s chief scientific and medical officers were a ‘timely and stark reminder that we are in the midst of a pandemic’.

He said: “If over the next few weeks people follow the guidance and we can trace the contacts, we can stop local restrictions from happening, because we did it before.

“We have still got time to turn this around. It is the local effort and response that is required.

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"If people respond to our calls for testing and respond to our contact tracing calls we can avoid a lockdown.

“Local people, boots on the ground, posting leaflets and talking to people, people calling from local phone numbers and email addresses makes a world of difference.

“Keeping in touch with people and getting soft intelligence and helping people struggling to self-isolate get their prescription are things which have helped areas such as Leicester, we have learned that from their lockdown.

“We are trying to do as much of that work as we are able to avoid becoming an area of national interest.

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“There are additional powers that we can use and we will use them if we have to use them, just like with the vegan festival (in Riddings in Amber Valley which the council used new coronavirus laws to ban).

“If what we have at the moment continues and it continues to be community transmission then we would be looking at reducing contact between households and if it was certain workplaces we would restrict those.

“There is no discernible pattern at the moment and I wouldn’t want to crystal ball gaze too much at this point.

"Hopefully we can stave it off again.

“It would be at the behest of national government really, we would lose local control and if the transmission is in the community it may see a ban on households meeting.

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"It is much better that we work together to avoid that and more serious measures being brought in in later weeks.

“People say the cases aren’t translating into hospital admissions but those typically track three to four weeks behind, so the hospital beds we are seeing filled now will have had the disease three or four weeks before.

“Those admissions are already happening and in two, three or four weeks time we will see those step up.

"If left unchecked those numbers will become bigger and bigger.”