It is “too early” to say whether England’s Covid restrictions will be able to end in the spring, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said.
Once the four priority groups have been vaccinated, by mid-February, “we’ll look then at how we’re doing,” he said.
Nearly two million people in the UK have had their first dose of vaccine in the past week, government figures show.
Scientist Marc Baguelin, who advises the government, has said restaurants and bars should not reopen before May.
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has said he “certainly hopes” schools in England can fully reopen before Easter, while Downing Street refused to be drawn on whether this would happen by then.
A further 1,290 people have died within 28 days of a positive Covid test and there have been another 37,892 cases, according to the latest government figures.
And almost five million people in the UK have had their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.
Home Secretary Priti Patel is due to lead a Downing Street briefing at about 17:00 GMT.
Speaking after a study showed infections in the community increased at the start of the latest lockdown in England, Mr Johnson said it was “absolutely crucial” that people observed the restrictions.
Referring to figures from the Imperial College London survey, he said they showed the new variant of the virus was “not more deadly but it is much more contagious and the numbers are very great”.
Dr Baguelin, from Imperial College, who sits on a sub-group of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) said the premature opening of the hospitality sector would lead to a “bump” in Covid-19 cases.
He told BBC Radio 4’s World at One programme even a partial reopening would generate “an increase in the R number”. An R number above one means the epidemic is growing.
“Something of this scale, if it was to happen earlier than May, would generate a bump in transmission, which is already really bad,” he said.
“So you have a lot of pressure on hospitals, you will have another wave of some extent. At best you will keep on having very, very unsustainable level of pressure on the NHS.”
NHS England figures show one in 10 major hospital trusts had no spare adult critical care beds last week.
This is a debate that is going to start to dominate public discourse.
With the vaccination programme under way, there is huge clamour to know what will happen once the most vulnerable are vaccinated, by mid-February.
The problem is there are still so many unknowns.
Firstly, it is hard to predict by how much lockdown will have reduced infection levels, considering there is a new faster-spreading variant to deal with.
The level of uptake will also be crucial. Surveys suggest as many as one in five may not have the vaccine – although the older, more vulnerable groups tend to be the most willing to be vaccinated.
And the fact that no vaccine is 100% effective means come February there could still be significant numbers of very vulnerable people who are not protected.
Another factor is whether the vaccine stops transmissions – so-called sterilising vaccination.
Trials have shown the vaccines are good at stopping symptoms developing. But that does not mean someone who has received a jab will not pass on the virus.
If it does not, that, of course, has implications on how many control measures have to be kept in place. It will take us at least until spring to know the answer to this.
At this stage, it seems hard to see much beyond the possible reopening of schools come March.
‘Serious problem’
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said it was an “impossible question” to ask how long the lockdown would need to last.
Under the national lockdown, people in England must stay at home and only go out for limited reasons.
This includes for food shopping, exercise, or work if they cannot do so from home. Similar measures are in place across much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
In Northern Ireland, coronavirus lockdown restrictions will be extended until 5 March, BBC News understands.
In Scotland, lockdown has been extended until at least the middle of February, with most school pupils to continue learning from home.
And in Wales health minister Vaughan Gething has said no “significant easing” of Wales’ Covid restrictions should be expected when the current guidelines are reviewed this month.
Sir Keir added that the coronavirus vaccines were “really good news” but “should not mask the fact that we have still got a very serious problem”.
The government is aiming to offer a vaccine to all over-70s, the extremely clinical vulnerable and health and care workers by mid-February.
Sixty-five new vaccination centres are opening in England, including a mosque in Birmingham and a cinema in Aylesbury.
In Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has insisted her country’s vaccine programme was not lagging behind.
More than 160,000 people have received a first vaccine dose in Northern Ireland and more than 175,000 have had the jab in Wales.
In other developments:
- Glastonbury Festival has been cancelled for a second year running
- Assaults on emergency workers made up more than a quarter of Covid-related crimes prosecuted in the first six months of the pandemic
- Pumps and sandbags were brought in to protect supplies of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine from flooding at a warehouse in Wrexham, north-east Wales
- Young people in Wales have been asked to share their experiences of the pandemic in a survey by the nation’s children’s commissioner
Source: BBC