05:18
The owner of the Real Greek and Franco Manca restaurant chains in the UK said business is picking up week by week, with trading up more than a quarter over pre-pandemic levels as tourists and office workers begin to return to city centres.
The Fulham Shore, which owns 75 restaurants, said that revenues across its chains increased by 27% in the three weeks to 5 September compared with the same period in 2019.
The company, which last month said it planned to open as many as 150 new restaurants over the next few years, said this was a significant surge in business compared with the 8% revenue increase over pre-pandemic levels it had seen in the eight-week period to 15 August.
Business in London, where Fulham Shore operates 17 restaurants in the West End and city centre office locations, remains down on pre-coronavirus levels but continues “to see a week-by-week improvement in footfall and revenues as tourists and office workers have started to return”.
The increase in business also coincides with the end of the “pingdemic” on 16 August, when the government scrapped the self-isolation rules for those with double vaccinations.
04:24
The UK’s Prof Dame Sarah Gilbert, who developed the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab, has said she does not support a widespread booster jab campaign as immunity among fully vaccinated people is “lasting well”.
She suggested extra doses should be directed to countries with a low rate of vaccination.
The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has said the Pfizer and AstraZeneca jabs are safe to use as boosters, but the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has yet to give its advice to ministers.
Gilbert’s comments came as data was presented to the JCVI that indicated a top-up Pfizer vaccine dose several months after a second jab greatly boosted the body’s immune response to Covid-19, according to the Times.
Updated
04:11
In Australia, New South Wales year 12 students will sit the full HSC exams in person in eight weeks’ time with strict Covid protocols in place to lower the risk of outbreaks.
After weeks of uncertainty leading to calls for the end-of-year assessments to be called off, the state’s education minister, Sarah Mitchell, on Friday detailed plans to deal with the impact of the pandemic.
All exam supervisors will need to be vaccinated, and a Covid-safe plan will be provided to schools to enforce venue caps, social distancing and hygiene measures.