Britons might be dependent upon some type of lockdown measures for a half year or more, England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jenny Harries said on Sunday, notice the nation faces a second influx of coronavirus on the off chance that they are lifted too rapidly.
The legislature has said it will audit in three weeks the lockdown steps it set up last Monday.
Jenny Harries said it is too early to know whether they have had the ideal impact of diminishing the pinnacle of the spread of the infection in Britain.
"We should not then out of nowhere return to our typical method for living, that would be very hazardous. On the off chance that we stop, at that point, the entirety of our endeavors will be squandered and we might see a subsequent pinnacle," Jenny Harries told newsgathering.
"After some time, likely throughout the following a half year, we will have a three-week audit, we will see where we are going. We have to keep that cover on and afterward steadily we will have the option to ideally modify a portion of the social removing measures and continuously get all of us back to typical."
Jenny Harries included that it was a "moving objective" and "we simply need to hold on to perceive how fruitful we have been".