British scientists: No normality until vaccine is found

LONDON  British scientists are dismissing Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s hope the country may emerge from coronavirus lockdown and return to normality by Christmas.

Johnson has announced more easing of restrictions, with people urged to return to public transit and workplaces. He said sports fans should return to stadiums by October and remaining restrictions could be lifted from November, “possibly in time for Christmas.”

In this handout photo provided by 10 Downing Street, Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a media briefing on coronavirus in Downing Street, London, Friday, July 17, 2020. Johnson has announced a further easing of the country’s lockdown, and that people will no longer be told to work from home and avoid public transit. That move appears at odds with the views of his chief scientific adviser, who said Thursday that there was “absolutely no reason” to change the work-from-home advice. (Andrew Parsons/10 Downing Street via AP)

But epidemiologist John Edmunds, a member of the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, said a return to pre-pandemic normality wouldn’t be possible until there’s a vaccine for the virus.

He said a world where people can “go to work normally, travel on the buses and trains, go on holiday without restrictions, meet friends, shake hands, hug each other and so on — that’s a long way off, unfortunately.”

England’s Chief Medical Officer, Chris Whitty, also said social distancing rules would have to be in place for a “prolonged period.”

Britain has registered more than 45,000 confirmed COVID-19 deaths, the highest total in Europe.

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