Plus, can you catch coronavirus twice?
| | | | A minute's silence will be held at 11:00 BST to honour healthcare, transport and other key workers who have died with coronavirus. Here are some of their stories. Meanwhile, the government has announced that the families of NHS and care staff who have died will receive a £60,000 compensation payment. The silence comes as a BBC Panorama investigation reveals ministers failed to buy crucial protective equipment to help care staff cope with a pandemic. There were no gowns, visors, swabs or body bags in the UK's stockpile when Covid-19 arrived. Elsewhere, hospitals in England have been told they can now start planning to restore some services suspended due to the virus, including cancer care and mental health support. Authorities are also urging those who need to go to hospital not to be put off by fears of catching the disease. In his latest diary instalment for the BBC, Dr John Wright discusses that very thing, particularly how few cancers are being diagnosed right now. Boris Johnson, now back in charge after recovering from coronavirus himself, has urged the nation not to lose patience with the lockdown at this time of "maximum risk". He said the restrictions must not be relaxed too soon. These are the five tests the government is relying on to decide when they should be. All of our coronavirus coverage is gathered here on our dedicated index. Among the latest stories, we investigate whether you can catch the disease twice, and answer a fresh tranche of your questions. Finally, on a lighter note, we know TV filming has been affected by the pandemic, but are some shows better with a dose of social distancing? | |
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| Where poverty and virus meet |
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| | | | | Since the lockdown a month ago, online demand for loungewear - defined as a hybrid between pyjamas and tracksuits - has soared 322% in the UK, according to LoveTheSales.com, a shopping website that aggregates sale items from 850 retailers. Online fashion retailer Boohoo says it is so popular that sales in April are higher than a year ago. "People aren't really buying going-out items, but they are buying homewear - hoodies, joggers, tracksuit bottoms," the firm said. Even fashion doyenne Dame Anna Wintour has been photographed working from home in her joggers. | |
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| | Dearbail Jordan & Mary-Ann Russon | BBC News | |
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| | | | The papers have plenty to say about Boris Johnson's first appearance after sick leave. The Sun thinks Britain will have been "mightily relieved" to see him back with his optimism undimmed. For Macer Hall, in the Daily Express, he "glowed with renewed vim and vigour". The Daily Telegraph says the PM will hold a series of meetings this week to finalise details of the UK's exit from lockdown. That could include turning new Nightingale hospitals into the primary centres for treating coronavirus patients, the Times reports, meaning traditional hospitals could become "Covid-free zones". The Daily Mirror feels that after more than a month of being cooped up, people have been given a glimmer of hope over a return to something resembling normal life. With similar optimism, the i's headline declares there's "hope in sight". | |
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