U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson was "steady" and in "great spirits" Tuesday and was getting "standard oxygen treatment" in the emergency unit the coronavirus, his representative said.
The representative additionally said the 55-year-old PM was breathing with no other help.
"He has not required mechanical ventilation or non-intrusive respiratory help," the representative told journalists.
Bringing down Street affirmed that the PM has not been determined to have pneumonia.
Johnson was hospitalized Sunday and admitted to concentrated consideration Monday after his condition compounded through the span of the evening.
Johnson declared on March 27 that he had tried positive for the coronavirus. He was admitted to St. Thomas' Hospital in London on Sunday evening for "tests" because of his "determined side effects."
The coronavirus assaults the respiratory framework and can cause pneumonia. For the most pessimistic scenarios, a ventilator is required to assume control over the breathing procedure and to permit the resistant framework to focus on battling the infection. Be that as it may, ventilators convey dangers.
Outside Secretary Dominic Raab was assigned to assume control over the obligations of leader "where fundamental," the legislature said.
Talking at the administration's every day preparation Tuesday, Raab strengthened what Johnson's representative had said about his wellbeing before in the day and offered expressions of help for the U.K. pioneer.
"He's not simply the prime minster. For us all in the Cabinet, he's not simply our chief. He's likewise an associate and he's additionally our companion," he said.
"I'm certain that he'll get through. Supposing that there's one thing I think about this PM, he's a contender, and he'll be back in charge driving us through this emergency very soon."
The clergyman included that the Cabinet had gotten "extremely clear guidelines" from Johnson and was "engaged with complete solidarity" to handle the wellbeing emergency.