The NHS is facing a “rocky few weeks ahead” as it contends with a wave of Omicron cases, the health secretary has said – as two major incidents were declared in England due to pressures caused by the COVID variant’s spread.

Speaking during a visit to King’s College Hospital in south London, Sajid Javid said these were “challenging times” for the health service and the “best thing” people could do was get their COVID-19 booster jab.

Follow live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

“We know now that Omicron is less severe… and we certainly know that once you get boosted that your chance of hospitalisation, our latest analysis shows, is almost 90% less than it was with Delta,” he said.

The health secretary said he had been told that in the hospital’s intensive care unit for COVID patients an estimated 70% of patients were unvaccinated.

His comments come after emergency services have said there is a civil emergency in Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent.

Multiple agencies including the NHS, Fire and Rescue Service, police and local authorities will step up co-ordination of their response to the surging infections and key workers needing to isolate.

More on Covid-19

Northamptonshire has also declared a system-wide major incident, with hospitals, care homes and emergency services subject to a shortage of staff and facing increased demand because of coronavirus, Northamptonshire Police said.

It comes after it was announced that some 200 Armed Forces personnel will be sent to support the NHS in London as hospitals grapple with staff shortages.

Military medics will assist NHS doctors and nurses with patient care, while general duty personnel will help fill gaps caused by other absences.

Latest NHS England figures show 39,142 NHS staff at hospital trusts were absent because of COVID on 2 January, an increase of 59% on the week before (24,632) and more than three times the level it was at the start of December.

As of Thursday, 17 hospital trusts in England had declared critical incidents – signalling there are fears that priority services cannot be safely delivered.

NHS national medical director Professor Stephen Powis said rising case numbers were “piling even more pressure” on workers.

Asked about hospitals declaring critical incidents, Mr Javid said there was a need for health services to “work together” because of the “workforce pressures” facing hospitals.

You May Also Like
Vaughan Gething or Jeremy Miles to be revealed as Welsh Labour’s new leader | UK News

Vaughan Gething or Jeremy Miles to be revealed as Welsh Labour’s new leader | UK News

The result of the race to become the next first minister of…

‘Great train robbery’: Eastern leg of HS2 scrapped as plans for Northern Powerhouse Rail downgraded

The eastern leg of HS2 has been scrapped and plans for Northern…
Suella Braverman meets Met chief amid Tory row over protest article | Politics News

Suella Braverman meets Met chief amid Tory row over protest article | Politics News

Suella Braverman has met the head of the Metropolitan Police to offer…

MP accused of watching porn in Commons should be kicked out of Tory party if guilty, says minister

An MP under investigation for allegedly watching pornography in the Commons should…