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Newborn baby who became the world’s youngest coronavirus victim is ‘out of danger and recovering’

Newborn baby in London who became the world’s youngest coronavirus victim after his mother fell ill is ‘out of danger and recovering’

  • Child’s mother was rushed to hospital days ago with suspected pneumonia 
  • Baby was treated at North Middlesex Hospital and mother at speciality hospital 
  • Thought that the  baby was infected after birth from coughs or sneezes 
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?

The newborn baby in London who became the world’s youngest coronavirus victim is reportedly ‘out of danger and recovering’. 

The child’s mother was rushed to hospital days ago with suspected pneumonia but her positive result was only known after the birth.

They were treated at separate hospitals – the baby at North Middlesex and the mother at a specialist infections hospital.

The newborn baby in London who became the world’s youngest coronavirus victim is reportedly ‘out of danger and recovering’. Stock picture 

The baby is being treated at North Middlesex Hospital where it was born, and the mother has been moved to a specialist infections hospital

The baby is being treated at North Middlesex Hospital where it was born, and the mother has been moved to a specialist infections hospital

According to The Sun, the baby is now ‘out of danger’ and recovering well.  

It is believed the baby was infected after the birth from coughs or sneezes and it was tested within minutes of its arrival. 

The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists has advised that healthy babies should not be separated from infected mums and can be breastfed.  

Officials have advised the pregnant women and babies are at low risk from coronavirus and are likely to only endure mild symptoms.  

The UK's death rate doubled overnight as a further ten patients died from the coronavirus. The total number of cases in the UK leapt from 820 this morning to 1,140 on Saturday

The UK’s death rate doubled overnight as a further ten patients died from the coronavirus. The total number of cases in the UK leapt from 820 this morning to 1,140 on Saturday

Unlike other infections, the mortality rate of coronavirus does not curve at both age groups, but only among the elderly.

The news comes as the UK’s coronavirus death rate doubled overnight to 21 and infections hit 1,140. 

Death toll in Wales could reach 20,000 people 

Up to 20,000 people in Wales could die amid the coronavirus outbreak in a worst-case scenario, the country’s health minister has said.

Vaughan Gething laid bare the scale of the challenge the Welsh NHS is facing in a press conference in which he also announced non-urgent surgical procedures and outpatient appointments would be suspended.

Mr Gething gave the worst-case figures while responding to criticism about his repeated refusal to ask the Welsh Rugby Union to postpone Wales’s Guinness Six Nations clash against Scotland in Cardiff on Saturday, following the union’s own decision to do so 24 hours before kick-off.

On Thursday, he had said ‘science doesn’t tell us that it really makes a difference’ that cancelling large events could save lives.

On Friday, Mr Gething said: ‘This is actually about how we make choices based on the best scientific advice available, based on the best advice of our chief medical officers.

‘That’s going to be the way the government behaves, because our priority is to save as many lives as possible. And it should not get away from the fact that is what we are talking about.

‘In an average flu season across the UK, there are 8-10,000 deaths. In the worst-case scenario, as you know in Wales, for coronavirus could be over 20,000 deaths.

‘That’s the choice we are making in how to use our resources.’

Meanwhile, Britain’s over-70s will be told to stay at home for four months in a governmental bid to end the coronavirus crisis, it was revealed last night.  

Mass isolating of the elderly – even if they are not ill – will begin within the next 20 days as Boris Johnson ratchets up efforts to tackle the UK’s ballooning outbreak. 

Although the drastic measures have been drawn up to protect those most vulnerable to the killer COVID-19 infection, it brings serious concerns about the wellbeing of pensioners cooped-up for such a long time.

Regular social outings will have to be scrapped and pangs of loneliness could compound an already stressful isolation experience, psychologists have warned.

Instructing the over-70s to remain indoors forms part of a wider package of emergency powers due to be officially rolled out by Downing Street this week.  

Tomorrow NHS England will hand out new guidelines for hospitals which will tell trusts they can scrap routine surgery and outpatient appointments, the Sunday Telegraph reports. It comes as senior forecaster Julian Jessop warned the paper that Britain could suffer a six per cent drop in GDP over coming months. 

Banning mass gatherings, allowing the police to detain suspected virus victims and forcing schools to stay open were already revealed to be part of the strategy going forward.

And last night the government’s coronavirus blueprint was fleshed out further as more impending measures emerged: 

  • Troops will be deployed to guard hospitals and supermarkets, where panic-buying unleashed carnage on Saturday
  • Thousands of private hospital beds will be drafted to relax the pressure on the NHS, which threatens to be overwhelmed as cases climb
  • Business will be urged to serve the national interest by overhauling production lines to instead manufacture essential medical equipment such as ventilators
  • Whole families will be told to isolate themselves even if just one member falls ill with coronavirus
  • The police are planning to sideline pursuing minor misdemeanors and only investigate crimes involving a loss of life to free up officers

Tomorrow NHS England will hand out new guidelines for hospitals which will tell trusts they can scrap routine surgery and outpatient appointments, the Sunday Telegraph reports. It comes as senior forecaster Julian Jessop warned the paper that Britain could suffer a six per cent drop in GDP over coming months. 

Coronavirus fears are growing in the UK after Government officials warned the real number of people with the infection could be as high as 10,000. A man is pictured wearing a military gas mask on the London Underground

Coronavirus fears are growing in the UK after Government officials warned the real number of people with the infection could be as high as 10,000. A man is pictured wearing a military gas mask on the London Underground

A man wearing a face mask is pictured on Edinburgh's almost deserted Royal Mile this morning

A man wearing a face mask is pictured on Edinburgh’s almost deserted Royal Mile this morning

Banning mass gatherings, allowing the police to detain suspected virus victims and forcing schools to stay open were already revealed to be part of the strategy going forward.

And last night the government’s coronavirus blueprint was fleshed out further as more impending measures emerged:

The government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) yesterday advised that the next interventions – shielding the vulnerable and household isolation – ‘will need to be instituted soon’.              

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