Updated On: 14 January, 2021 08:16 AM IST | London | Agencies
Hospitals in England are now treating 55 per cent more COVID cases than during the first peak in April; WHO says the new UK strain has spread to 50 territories, and the South African variant to 20

A patient is taken from an ambulance by staff at the Royal Free Hospital in London on January 11. Pic/AFP
England's health care system may move patients into hotels to ease pressure on hospitals struggling to handle rising COVID-19 admissions. Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Wednesday that the National Health Service was looking at various ways to reduce the strain on hospitals, including moving patients to hotels when appropriate. Discussions about the issue were first reported by the Guardian newspaper.
“We would only ever do that if it was clinically the right thing for somebody,"Hancock told Sky News. “In some cases, people need sit-down care, they don't actually need to be in a hospital bed." Britain already has Europe's deadliest coronavirus outbreak, with over 83,000 deaths, and the number of hospital beds filled by COVID-19 patients is still rising. Hospitals in England are now treating 55% more COVID-19 cases than during the first peak of the pandemic in April.