
Allowing those who have received two doses of a coronavirus vaccine to skip quarantine would be unfair and could cause âresentmentâ, according to a scientific adviser.
Professor Robert West, a health psychologist who is a member of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Behaviours (SPI-B), which advises Sage said the problems associated with such an exemption âoutweigh the potential benefitsâ.
His comments come amid reports that ministers are due to meet on Monday to agree a plan to drop all legal requirements, including self-isolation, for fully vaccinated people who come into contact with someone who is infected.
The University College London academic told Times Radio: âThe most serious problem is that if you have a situation where not everyone has been even offered the vaccine then youâve already got clearly a huge unfairness.
âWhen you get unfairness in situations like this, you get resentment and when you get resentment you can get loss of compliance.â
But Prof Westâs assertion has been challenged by other medical experts who said it would be âperfectly OKâ to allow those who are fully vaccinated more freedoms.
Dr Bharat Pankhania, a senior clinical lecturer in communicable diseases at the University of Exeter, told BBC Radio 4âs Today programme that vaccines were breaking the link between cases, hospital admissions and deaths, meaning âwe can start thinking about other uncoupling measures, such as no need to quarantine after being fully immunisedâ.
Epidemiologist Professor Christophe Fraser, who advised the Department of Health on test and trace, said a âmidwayâ proposal could be that those who have received both jabs are tested every day instead of undertaking a quarantine period.
The Oxford University academic said he agreed the self-isolation policy âneeds to be reviewed in light of the data on the vaccine effectivenessâ.
The debate about extra rights for those who have been vaccinated is playing out amid a background of an âalarmingâ rise in Covid-19 cases in England.
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The latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that about one in 260 people in private households in England had Covid in the week to June 26 â up from one in 440 in the previous week and the highest level since the week to February 27.
The increase has caused leading doctors to urge the Government to keep some restrictions in place in England after July 19 in a bid to stem the rate of infection.
The British Medical Association (BMA) said that keeping some protective measures in place was âcrucialâ to stop spiralling case numbers having a âdevastating impactâ on peopleâs health, the NHS the economy and education.
Chief medical officer for England Professor Chris Whitty, according to The Times, has privately predicted that the use of face coverings will continue to be needed after the Prime Ministerâs âterminus dateâ for unlocking.
The report follows Health Secretary Sajid Javid refusing to confirm, when asked to by MPs in the Commons this week, that all restrictions will be scrapped at Stage 4 of the road map out of lockdown.
Meanwhile, hospitality bosses have demanded reforms to the NHS Test and Trace app, amid complaints it is leading to staff shortages and could end up putting punters off visiting pubs and restaurants.
Rob Pitcher, chief executive of Revolution Bars Group, which runs 66 bars across the UK, said the app was âcasting the net quite wideâ in terms of who it pings as a close contact of a positive case, making it âvery difficultâ for the sector to recover following the coronavirus lockdowns.
Speaking to the Today programme, Mr Pitcher said: âAt any one point at the moment, weâve probably got 10-15% of our estate in some form of closure. It is having a huge impact across our business and the industry at large.â
Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: âNHS Test and Trace is becoming a huge issue for our pubs.
âAlready pubs are closing or greatly reducing their opening hours due to staff shortages caused by app pings â despite staff testing negative on lateral flow tests.
âWe urge the Government to work with us to find a sensible solution to this that still ensures staff and customer safety.â
But Government adviser Prof Fraser said that those pinged would have come into the âkind of contact which gives a reasonable probability that you may have been infectedâ and that app-issued self-isolation requirements were helping to slow infections.