Covid cases soar by 52 per cent week-on-week to 48,161 as another 25 people die from the virus
Covid cases soar by 52 per cent week-on-week to 48,161, another 740 people are hospitalised in 31% rise – but deaths stay flat with another 25 fatalities
- The UK has today recorded 48,161 Covid cases – up from the 31,772 last Sunday
- 25 people have died from Covid in the last 24 hours, compared to 26 last week
- However the number of people admitted to hospital with Covid has increased
- It was 563 people at this point last week, but 740 patients in today’s figures
Covid cases across the UK have soared by 52 per cent week-on-week, but the number of deaths has fallen slightly.
The UK has today recorded 48,161 Covid cases – up from the 31,772 cases recorded last Sunday.
But while case numbers are on the rise, the Covid death figures have seen a slight decrease.
Last week 26 people were recorded as having died from Covid, while figures released today showed 25 people had died of Covid in the last 24 hours.
Meanwhile, hospital figures have increased. Figures reported on Sunday last week, showed 563 had been admitted to hospital on July 6 and 3,081 in the week to that date.
This week’s figures show 740 patients had been admitted with Covid on July 13, and 4,313 in the week to that date.
The day comparison of hospitalisations is an increase of around 30 per cent, while the week comparison is around 40 per cent.
Covid cases across the UK have soared by 52 per cent week-on-week, but the number of deaths has fallen slightly
Last week 26 people were recorded as having died from Covid, while figures released today showed 25 people had died of Covid in the last 24 hours
This week’s figures show 740 patients had been admitted with Covid on July 13, and 4,313 in the week to that date
The latest testing figures, for July 15, show 1,177,716 tests were recorded on that day, while 7,165,070 were recorded in the week to that date.
In total, 5,433,939 people in the UK have now tested positive for Covid since the start of the pandemic.
While today’s Covid case figures are higher than last week, they are lower than on Friday, when the UK recorded more than 50,000 daily cases of Covid for the first time since mid-January.
According to experts, the tally is soon expected to pass the previous peak of 68,000.
It comes as one of the UK’s top epidemiologists today refused to rule out a new lockdown before Christmas, as Boris Johnson‘s plans for a triumphant end to more than six months of lockdown in England tomorrow collapsed into complete disarray.
Professor Neil Ferguson said he ‘can’t be certain’ over whether the country will need to lock down again in the winter before Christmas.
But he admitted that in a worst-case scenario ‘there may be a need to basically slow spread to some extent’ to ease pressure on the NHS.
But appearing on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show, he said that it was possible 2,000 people would be hospitalised a day, and 200,000 new daily cases, but it would be three weeks before the impact of Freedom Day tomorrow is known.
Prof Ferguson said: ‘We’ll know it’s worked when case numbers plateau and start going down, we know then hospitalisations and deaths will take some more weeks.
‘The best projections suggest that could happen any time from, really, mid-August to mid-September. So, we will have to be patient.
‘It’ll also take us three weeks before we know the effect of Monday, of relaxing restrictions, and what that will do to case numbers. So, it’s going to be quite a period of time.’
Prof Neil Ferguson said he ‘can’t be certain’ over whether the country will need to lock down again in the winter before Christmas.
It came as the Prime Minister found himself under attack from all sides of the political spectrum amid surging virus cases and hundreds of thousands being forced to self-isolate by the NHS Covid app.
Former prime minister Tony Blair led calls today for the quarantine rules to be axed for the fully vaccinated immediately as firms warned of imminent closures to factories, potentially affecting food supplies.
Meanwhile public transport has also been hit, with parts of the London Underground forced to shut yesterday due to a lack of staff.
But at the same time leading public health officials from across the UK warned that tomorrow’s great unlocking in England – while other home nations take more cautious routes from lockdown – risked ‘letting Covid rip’.
The Mail on Sunday today revealed that Mr Johnson cancelled plans for a Churchillian launch of Freedom Day after No 10 became alarmed by the surge in the number of infections.
Officials had discussed marking the lifting of Covid restrictions with a rousing speech by the Prime Minister at an historic venue associated with the wartime leader – until scientific advisers took fright at the recent climb in cases.
Mr Johnson has abandoned his previously bullish attitude to tomorrow’s ditching of most restrictions – including social distancing and legal limits on gatherings – and is no longer referring to the moment as ‘irreversible’.
Sage adviser Dr Neil Ferguson today admitted that the UK could hit 2,000 daily hospitalisations and 200,000 daily infections, which would put pressure on the NHS. He confirmed he would continue to wear a mask into the autumn, on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show.
Former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt yesterday described the situation as ‘very serious’, and raised the prospect of another lockdown this autumn.
Mr Hunt, who is now chairman of the Commons Health and Social Care Committee, said that if cases were still rising in September, ‘I think we are going to have to reconsider’.
He added the NHS dashboard’s warning light ‘is not flashing amber, it is flashing red’, although he admitted he was hopeful that enough people have had either the virus or vaccine for the country to be approaching herd immunity.
A Government source said: ‘The plan had been for Boris to effectively declare victory over the virus by summoning the spirit of Churchill, with appropriately stirring rhetoric. That no longer feels appropriate.’
Despite the relaxation in rules, the official guidelines still advise that facemasks should be worn in enclosed spaces such as shops and on public transport, while pubs and bars should be table service only.
Mr Johnson published a biography of Churchill, writing that ‘he alone saved our civilisation’.
Critics detected an attempt to draw parallels with his predecessor when the Prime Minister described him as ‘a thoroughgoing genius’ although ‘there were too many Tories who thought of him as an unprincipled opportunist’.
It comes as Mr Johnson claimed he only ‘briefly’ looked at trying to skip Covid quarantine today after a humiliating U-turn over plans to join a daily testing pilot scheme instead in the face of red hot public outrage.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has abandoned plans for a Churchillian victory speech tomorrow because of the rapidly escalating numbers of Covid-19 infection
The Prime Minister used a social media video this afternoon to say he had been ‘pinged’ after Health Secretary Sajid Javid tested positive for the virus yesterday and would be isolating at Chequers until July 26.
But it came after a morning of political anger in the summer heat as he and Chancellor Rishi Sunak initially announced they would use a public sector worker pilot which allows people out of self-isolation every day to continue working if they pass a daily lateral flow test.
Amid widespread outrage from politicians, business leaders and the public they caved in within hours and revealed they would join thousands of people who are having to self-isolate at home – in the PM’s case his country estate in Buckinghamshire.
They had faced accusations they were accessing a ‘VIP lane’ that was not available workers who are having to isolate, bringing some businesses and public transport o the bring of collapse.
But video put out this afternoon, Mr Johnson said: ‘We did look briefly into the idea of us taking part in the pilot scheme which allows people to test daily, but I think it’s far more important that everybody sticks to the same rules.
‘That’s why I’m going to be self-isolating until the 26th of July. I really do urge everybody to stick with the programme and take the appropriate course of action when you’re asked to do so by NHS Test and Trace.’
Mr Johnson faced condemnation this morning over the plan, which comes as tens of thousands of workers are forced to isolate by a Covid app ‘pingdemic’.
Labour leader Keir Starmer said: ‘The only reason that he’s U-turned on this is because he’s been busted. It’s like bank robbers who’ve got caught and now they’re offering the money back.’
The Health Secretary triggered fears of a disruptive ‘pingdemic’ striking at the heart of Government after reveling yesterday he has tested positive.
Mr Javid had visited the Commons and Downing Street in previous days – and is understood to have held a lengthy face-to-face meeting with Boris Johnson just before his symptoms developed – sparking concerns that senior figures across Whitehall would have to be confined to home.
One insider warned that ‘half the Cabinet’ could be in isolation by the end of the week.
Late this morning a No10 spokesman said: ‘The Prime Minister has been contacted by NHS Test and Trace to say he is a contact of someone with Covid.
‘He was at Chequers when contacted by Test and Trace and will remain there to isolate. He will not be taking part in the testing pilot.
‘He will continue to conduct meetings with ministers remotely. The Chancellor has also been contacted and will also isolate as required and will not be taking part in the pilot.’
In a tweet Mr Sunak said: ‘Whilst the test and trace pilot is fairly restrictive, allowing only essential government business, I recognise that even the sense that the rules aren’t the same for everyone is wrong.
‘To that end I’ll be self isolating as normal and not taking part in the pilot.’
Earlier No10 had said Mr Johnson would take advantage of the scheme not widely available to the public, leading to accusations they were using a ‘VIP lane’ while ordinary families struggled.
The move triggered a furious backlash as rules forcing close associates of Covid cases to self-isolate for 10 days threaten to bring Britain to its knees.
The NHS has warned of staff shortages, unions say factories could start closing with in days and there are fears over some food supplies.
Yesterday parts of the London Underground were forced to cease running due to a lack of staff.
Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said the situation would infuriate workers and hard-pressed parents.
‘For many of them, waking up this morning to hear that there is a special rule, an exclusive rule, for Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak, they will be saying that this looks like one rule for them and something else for the rest of us,’ he told Sky’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday.
‘Nobody understands how you can get access to this special treatment or VIP lane where you don’t have to isolate yourself.
‘If it is a pilot, why can’t employers apply for their workforce to be part of this pilot, why can’t schools apply to be part of this pilot test?
‘I do think a lot of people are going to be looking at this and thinking ‘what on earth is going on?”
Mr Ashworth added: ‘This is at a time when we need to maintain confidence in the isolation policies, because isolation, taking yourself away from society if you’ve been in contact with someone who’s got the virus, is one of the key ways we break transmission and, of course, we know infections are rising.’
Richard Walker, the boss of frozen food chain Iceland, was also among those who blasted the PM today.
He tweeted: ‘Shame the hundreds of Iceland staff who’ve been pinged can’t avoid self-isolation. We can all do a daily lateral flow test.’