Covid: SAGE scientist quits as he warns of ‘concerning’ virus levels

An electronic notice board in Bolton town centre, one of the areas of the UK where the Covid variant first identified in India is spreading fastest. Picture date: Tuesday May 25, 2021.
An electronic notice board in Bolton town centre, one of the areas of the UK where the Covid variant first identified in India is spreading fastest. Picture date: Tuesday May 25, 2021.
Peter Byrne
Samantha Haynes

By Samantha Haynes


Published: 03/11/2021

- 05:47

Updated: 03/11/2021

- 11:03

Sir Jeremy Farrar leaves the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies at the end of October, he confirmed in a statement.

A scientist who was one of the Government’s leading advisers on coronavirus has quit as he warned levels of coronavirus transmission across the country were “concerning”.

Sir Jeremy Farrar said that Sage had provided scientific advice to the Government often under “huge pressure”.


But Labour said the move was a “serious blow that reveals the level of concern about the Government’s mishandling of the pandemic”.

Sky News reported that Sir Jeremy was pushing for a “vaccine plus” system whereby mask-wearing, ventilation and continued coronavirus testing would help to get the country through the winter as coronavirus cases remain high.

However, the Government has so far rejected calls to take further steps – its so-called Plan B.

A Government spokesperson said the data does not yet show that Plan B is necessary and that ministers are continuing to be guided by scientific and medical experts.

Sir Jeremy Farrar leaves the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies at the end of October, he confirmed in a statement.
Sir Jeremy Farrar leaves the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies at the end of October, he confirmed in a statement.
Photo Courtesy of the Royal Society

While a Government Office for Science spokesperson added: “We can confirm that Sir Jeremy has stood down from the Covid Sage activation, and thank him for his contribution from the very start of the activation.

“Sage continues to provide Government with independent expert scientific and technical advice.”

In a statement, Sir Jeremy stressed that he was stepping down to focus on his work at health research foundation the Wellcome Trust.

But he said: “The Covid-19 crisis is a long way from over, with the global situation deeply troubling.

“The high levels of transmission seen in the UK remain concerning, but I stepped down as a participant of Sage knowing ministers had been provided with most of the key science advice needed over the winter months.

“Throughout this crisis Sage has provided vital evidence, and independent, expert, transparent advice to support the UK response, often under huge pressure.

“It has been an honour to have joined the hundreds of scientists who have contributed, and I thank Patrick Vallance and Chris Whitty for outstanding leadership. I remain, as always, available where I may offer help as a clinical scientist or as director of Wellcome.”

Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said his resignation was a “serious blow”.

He said: “To lose a heavyweight figure like Sir Jeremy from Sage is a serious blow that reveals the level of concern about the Government’s mishandling of the pandemic.

“While complacent ministers bury their heads in the sand, the vaccination programme continues to stutter and stall, and their failure to fix sick pay or provide ventilation support is allowing the virus to spread.”

It comes as the Government said a further 293 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Tuesday, although the total includes data from NHS England which was not provided in time for Monday’s figures.

Separate figures published by the Office for National Statistics show there have been 166,000 deaths registered in the UK where Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate.

As of 9am on Tuesday, there had been a further 33,865 lab-confirmed Covid-19 cases in the UK, the Government said.

Official figures showed the proportion of children out of school for Covid 19-related reasons in England rose in the week before half-term.

The Department for Education estimates 3.2% of all pupils – around 248,000 children – did not attend class for Covid-related reasons on October 21, up from 2.6% (approximately 209,000 children) on October 14.

Among pupils absent for Covid-19 reasons, the main reason for absence was a confirmed case of coronavirus, with around 127,000 pupils off for this reason, compared to around 111,000 a week before.

Overall some 88.2% of students were in class on October 21, which is down from 90% on October 14.

You may like