
A Welsh Government minister has said he was âfairly surprisedâ by the Prime Ministerâs announcement that self-isolation rules could be scrapped early, and claimed the move is not backed up by scientific evidence.
Boris Johnson has said all remaining Covid-19 restrictions in England could be gone within weeks, including the legal requirement to isolate after a positive coronavirus test. The previous plan had been to end the rule on March 24.
The move has taken many experts by surprise, with one describing it as either âbrave or stupidâ.
Welsh economy minister Vaughan Gething told BBC Breakfast that Mr Johnsonâs statement did not appear to be based on âpublic health adviceâ.
He said: âI was fairly surprised at the manner of the announcement made by the Prime Minister and indeed the fact there doesnât appear to be an underpinning of public health advice.
âThere was no meeting with chief medical officers in advance of the Prime Ministerâs statement. Iâve not seen advice from Sage on this, or indeed scientific evidence underpinning whatâs happened from any other source.
âHere in Wales, the choices we are making today have gone through that process.â
The Prime Minister cited falling hospital cases and high levels immunity, from vaccination and infection, in the population for his reasoning.
However, infection levels remain high and the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggests they could be rising again. There is also concern about a subvariant of Omicron, BA.2, that is emerging.
Mr Gething will host Walesâs publicly-broadcasted three-week review of coronavirus regulations on Friday after First Minister Mark Drakeford tested positive for coronavirus on Thursday.
The Welsh Government announced on Thursday night that Covid passes are to be scrapped this month and the need to wear face coverings in certain venues removed as coronavirus cases continue to fall.
Mr Drakeford, who has typically taken a cautious approach to lifting restrictions, signalled that face masks could be scrapped completely by the end of March should public health conditions continue to improve.
But he has said there are currently no plans to end the self-isolation rules in the country, which mean people with Covid have to remain at home for five full days and return a negative lateral flow test on days five and six.