PEOPLE are being urged to minimise travel in and out of the region after a new package of support was announced to tackle rising Covid-19 rates.

The Government has announced that areas of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority – St Helens, Wirral, Knowsley, Sefton, Liverpool and Halton – will receive further support to deal with the escalation of the Delta variant.

This support includes surge testing, tracing, isolation support and maximising vaccine uptake.

But the measures also include new guidance issued to try and stem the flow of infections, such as minimising travel in and out of the affected areas.

According to the Government, enhanced support packages aim to suppress the spread of the Delta variant, and break chains of transmission

They say the approach has been working in South London and Bolton, stopping a rise in the number of cases

Areas have been given the support after high numbers of cases of the Delta (B1.617.2) variant have been identified.

The new support is the same package confirmed for Greater Manchester and Lancashire last Tuesday, and in Bolton which has since seen a decrease in cases.

Testing, isolation and vaccinations will aim to suppress and control the spread of the virus and variants in both the short and longer term, when used in combination with people following existing guidance such as hands, face, space and fresh air.

As part of the enhanced support package, extra guidance will be set out on steps people can take, such as minimising travel in and out of the affected areas. The guidance is the same as that already set out for eight areas including Greater Manchester and Hounslow.

Support available to local areas will include:

  • additional resources to help local authorities with testing, logistics, planning and workforce to assist with testing, door-to-door visits to engage with residents and other activities – these may come from the Surge Rapid Response Teams, from military aid or other sources depending on requirements
  • wastewater testing samples being prioritised for sequencing
  • specialist communications support to increase awareness and focus engagement with disadvantaged groups
  • maximising vaccine uptake by expanding existing channels, developing new capacity and increasing local and targeted communications to reach different communities
  • supervised in-school testing and discretion to reintroduce face coverings in indoor communal areas and classrooms in schools if they and directors of public health decide it is appropriate
  • surge testing and enhanced contact tracing
  • enhanced monitoring (genomic sequencing, genotype assay testing)

Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock said: "We are doing everything we can to stop the spread of the Delta variant, and working with local authorities, we are providing a strengthened package of support in areas where cases of the variant are increasing.

"We know this approach has made a real impact in South London and in Bolton where we have seen it stall rising cases. I urge people living these areas to get tested, come forward for your vaccine as soon as you are eligible and make sure to get the all-important second jab – that is how we will beat this virus."

Chief Executive of the UK Health Security Agency, Dr Jenny Harries, said: "The Delta variant is now the dominant strain across the UK, with cases continuing to rise in some areas. People in these areas can help protect their community by remaining cautious, by working from home if possible and remembering to practise hands, face, space and fresh air.

"Getting the vaccine gives a strong level of protection against this variant and I strongly recommend that everyone gets both jabs when the NHS invites you – it will protect you and your loved ones.

"Early research shows that vaccines provide strong protection against the new variants. Effectiveness against symptomatic disease from the Delta (B.1.617.2) variant is similar after 2 doses compared with the Alpha variant (B.1.1.7), and even higher levels of effectiveness are expected against hospitalisations and death.

"The government and its world-leading scientists are closely monitoring the evolving situation and the rates of variants, and will not hesitate to take additional action whenever necessary.

Further details about the measures in each area will be made available through individual local authorities, a government statement added.