HOMECOMING SCREEN

Brits in coronavirus-hit Italy slam ‘pitiful’ UK response as they’re told to ‘self-isolate’ on return after seven deaths

BRITS returning from parts of Italy ravaged by coronavirus blasted the government's "pitiful" response to the deadly virus as they are told to "self-isolate".

Tourists who have travelled to the Mediterranean country are being told to "self-isolate" for 14 days to stop the spread of the bug that has claimed seven lives in Italy so far.

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"HIGH-RISK"

Italy has not been added to the Number 10’s list of “high-risk” countries prompting criticism from medics concerned tourists potentially carrying the virus are not being quarantined.

However, Britain’s chief medical officer is expected to add a number of northern reigns of Italy to that list.

Health officials are believed to be considering whether to go further and ask everyone returning from the regions to stay at home for two weeks.

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This comes as an Alitalia plane has been quarantined after arriving in Mauritius, it has been reported.

Seven people have died in Italy and more than 200 are infected – the largest number of cases outside China, Japan and South Korea.

Travel advice will change this morning to tell anyone who has travelled north of Pisa in Italy they should keep themselves at home if they have flu-like symptoms.

And if they have travelled to any quarantined area in Italy, they should self isolate no matter what, the Health Secretary said this morning.

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He told BBC News: "Those have been to Northern Italy, anybody that has been to Italy north of Pisa should, if they have flu like symptoms, should self isolate - which means go home and try to stay out of contact with other people.

"If people have been to affected areas the Italian government have quarantined, then they should self isolate whether or not they have symptoms."

He also told LBC that if Coronavirus does become a pandemic it cannot be stopped from coming to the UK in a "big way" and admitted he was "pretty worried" about it.

More cases in the UK are expected, he added, and ministers are holding weekly COBRA meetings to discuss the emergency.

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But the Government have not yet told Brits not to travel to Italy as a whole.

BRITS TO 'SELF-ISOLATE'

The five confirmed victims were all either elderly or had been suffering from underlying health conditions.

The deaths of three elderly patients - a 77-year-old woman, a 78-year-old man and second man, aged 53 - were confirmed on Friday and Saturday.

The fourth victim, an 84-year-old man from Bergam,o who was taken to hospital with an unrelated illness died yesterday.

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An 88-year-old victim, from Caselle Landi in hard-hit Lombardy - home to 165 victims -was confirmed dead this morning.

Panicking Italians have cleared supermarket shelves of food and drinkCredit: EPA
A view of a deserted street in Codogno, one the northern Italian towns placed under lockdownCredit: EPA
A cop enforces a blockade at the entrance of the small town of Vo' Euganeo, PadovaCredit: EPA
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The details of the sixth and seventh victims have not yet been confirmed by Italian authorities.

In France, there was panic after a coach driver complained of feeling unwell, as he appeared to display coronavirus symptoms after arriving from Milan.

Cops immediately took control of the bus in Lyon earlier yesterday.

Its driver is being screened for the killer virus, while passengers are in quarantine - after they were kept inside the vehicle for two hours.

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