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UK employers will have to pay wages of staff asked to isolate by Covid-19 trace system

BRITISH employers should pay the wages of anyone told to stay at home by England's Covid-19 test and trace system, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Thursday (28).

The service is aimed at allowing the loosening of lockdown measures for most of the population. From Thursday, contacts of those who test positive will be instructed to isolate for 14 days, even if they have no symptoms.


Asked during an interview on Sky News if employers were being asked to step in and pay people's wages while they isolate, Hancock said: "Yes."

"If you are instructed by the NHS, for public health reasons, to stay at home then that is the equivalent in employment law to being ill and it is very important that employers are flexible about this," he said.

Hancock also said an accompanying tracing app, which is being trialled on the Isle of Wight and is key to finding anonymous contacts, is ready but is not being brought in yet.

The tracing service, which will have a task-force of 40,000 specialists to test those with symptoms and identify their contacts, will initially rely on good will but the government said sanctions could be imposed if people did not comply.

"We are confident the vast majority of people will participate," Hancock told BBC News.

Britain abandoned test and trace in March when the virus started spreading exponentially and there was insufficient capacity to test more than a fraction of those with symptoms.

The government says there is now enough capacity for all who needed one to be tested and it is aiming to get test results back within 24 hours.

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he 51-year-old, who has been using Mounjaro, believes the jab may be behind the sudden decline

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Robbie Williams says weight-loss jabs are harming his eyesight as vision worsens

Highlights

  • Singer links rapidly deteriorating eyesight to Mounjaro injections
  • Says he struggles to see faces while performing live
  • Urges fans to research side effects before using weight-loss drugs
  • Notes the injections have eased long-standing mental health pressures

Robbie Williams voices concern over eyesight decline

Robbie Williams fears his weight-loss injections are damaging his vision, saying his eyesight has grown increasingly blurry in recent months. The 51-year-old, who has been using Mounjaro, believes the jab may be behind the sudden decline and wants others to be aware of possible side effects.

He told The Sun he first noticed something was wrong while watching an American football game, when the players appeared “just shapes on the field”. An optician later prescribed new glasses, but Williams said he hadn’t initially linked the problem to the injections.

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