The Harrogate district’s covid infection rate is on course to reach record levels this month, as almost all legal restrictions on social contact are lifted.
Social distancing rules which have governed people’s lives for over a year have finally ended today, with face masks no longer mandatory in shops and on public transport, limits on gathering gone and the work from home guidance ended.
Nightclubs, theatres and restaurants can also fully reopen, while pubs are no longer restricted to table service only.
But with covid cases continuing to soar, there are renewed warnings about pressures on key sectors of the economy and the NHS.
The weekly rate of infections in the Harrogate district currently stands at 495 cases per 100,000 people and appears certain to pass the previous peak of 497 in January.
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Meanwhile, today’s
Public Health England figures showed a further 103 cases have been reported across the district.
Just five hospital patients
But the number of people currently in hospital with covid is nowhere near the levels from previous peaks – with just five patients in Harrogate as of last Wednesday.
There has also not been a virus-related death at the district hospital in more than three months.
With vaccines providing protection against serious illness, the effects of the virus are very different this time round. But the big unknown is how far this rise in cases will go before the virus slows down or goes into reverse.
Richard Flinton, chief executive of
North Yorkshire County Council, said in a letter to residents last week that although restrictions were ending, people should still “act responsibly” as he also encouraged the continued wearing of face coverings in busy spaces.
He said:
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