Britain’s Covid-19 deaths rise by 286 in preliminary count

Britain’s coronavirus death toll today jumped by 286, with Northern Ireland having now gone three days in-a-row without recording a single fatality as the outbreak continues to fade.  

Department of Health figures show 277 of the Covid-19 victims were from England, while the other nine were in Wales. No laboratory-confirmed deaths were recorded in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

It means the official number of coronavirus deaths now stands at 40,883. But separate grim statistics released today suggested the disease has already claimed at least 51,000 lives in the UK. 

Other data shows nearly 64,000 ‘excess deaths’ have already been recorded across the home nations since the outbreak spiralled out of control in March. 

Department of Health figures show 324 deaths were announced last Tuesday. And only 55 fatalities were posted yesterday, in the lowest daily toll since before lockdown was imposed on March 23. 

London hospitals also recorded no new fatalities for the first time since mid-March. But data released on Sundays and Mondays are always lower because of a delay in recording deaths at the weekend.   

In other coronavirus developments in Britain today:

  • Secondary schools could remain shut beyond September while ministers are set to drop plans to get all primary pupils back in the classroom before the summer holidays, it was revealed;
  • Boris Johnson is under growing pressure to slash the two metre social distancing rule amid claims more than half of Cabinet ministers support the move to unlock the economy;
  • British holidaymakers’ plans for a summer holiday in Spain were thrown into confusion as the country said it was not discussion the creation of an ‘air bridge’ for tourists with the UK;
  • Mr Johnson’s government has the worst approval rating in the world for its handling of the coronavirus pandemic — below even Donald Trump, despite the US having the highest death toll.

LESS THAN A FIFTH OF DEATHS INVOLVED COVID-19 IN WEEK ENDING MAY 29 – THE LOWEST RATE SINCE LOCKDOWN 

Less than a fifth of deaths registered in the week ending May 29 in England and Wales involved coronavirus — the lowest proportion since when lockdown was imposed on March 23, figures show. 

There were 9,824 deaths registered in the week ending May 29 — a fall from the previous week but still 1,653 deaths higher than what would usually be expected, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. 

Of these, 1,822 involved Covid-19 — 18.5 per cent of the total that week and the lowest number of weekly coronavirus deaths for eight weeks. 

It is also the first time the proportion of weekly Covid-19 deaths has fallen to under a fifth since the week lockdown was imposed, the week ending March 27, when the virus accounted for 5 per cent of the deaths. 

While numbers are falling, there have been tens of thousands of ‘excess’ deaths compared to the average number of deaths over five years for the same period. 

The total number of excess deaths has passed 63,500, with Tuesday’s figures showing 57,961 excess deaths in England and Wales between March 21 and May 29 2020. 

Added together with the numbers of excess deaths for Scotland and Northern Ireland published last week, the total number of excess deaths in the UK across this period now stands at 63,596. All figures are based on death registrations. 

Department of Health data released today showed that 102,930 tests were carried out yesterday, a figure that included antibody tests for frontline NHS and care workers.

But bosses again refused to say how many people were tested, meaning the exact number of Brits who have been swabbed for the SARS-CoV-2 virus has been a mystery since May 22.

Separate statistics released by the Department of Health showed 1,387 more people tested positive for Covid-19. It means the official size of the UK’s coronavirus outbreak now sits at 289,140 cases but the true scale of the crisis is estimated to be in the millions.

The 77 Covid-19 deaths announced yesterday was around 32 per cent lower than the 113 recorded last Sunday. It was also down a similar amount from the Sunday two weeks ago (118 deaths).

The daily data does not represent how many Covid-19 patients died within the last 24 hours — it is only how many fatalities have been reported and registered with the authorities.

The data does not always match the updates provided by each of the home nations. For example, the Scottish government today announced seven deaths – but the geographical breakdown showed it had no deaths.

But the Department of Health has a different time cut-off, meaning the daily updates from Scotland as well as Northern Ireland — which has also gone two days without a death — are always out of sync.

NHS England today announced 129 laboratory-confirmed Covid-19 deaths in hospitals. Wales registered nine victims in all settings, followed by seven in Scotland. Northern Ireland recorded none for the third day running.

Data compiled by the statistical bodies of each of the home nations show 51,086 people died of either confirmed or suspected Covid-19 across the UK by the end of May.

The real number of victims will be even higher because the tally only takes into account deaths that occurred up until May 31 in Scotland and May 29 in the rest of Britain, meaning it is up to 10 days out of date.

Department of Health data released today showed that 102,930 tests were carried out yesterday, a figure that included antibody tests for frontline NHS and care workers. 

But bosses again refused to say how many people were tested, meaning the exact number of Brits who have been swabbed for the SARS-CoV-2 virus has been a mystery since May 22. 

Separate statistics released by the Department of Health showed 1,387 more people tested positive for Covid-19. It means the official size of the UK’s coronavirus outbreak now sits at 289,140 cases but the true scale of the crisis is estimated to be in the millions.

The 77 Covid-19 deaths announced yesterday was around 32 per cent lower than the 113 recorded last Sunday. It was also down a similar amount from the Sunday two weeks ago (118 deaths).

The daily data does not represent how many Covid-19 patients died within the last 24 hours — it is only how many fatalities have been reported and registered with the authorities.    

The data does not always match the updates provided by each of the home nations. For example, the Scottish government today announced seven deaths – but the geographical breakdown showed it had no deaths. 

But the Department of Health has a different time cut-off, meaning the daily updates from Scotland as well as Northern Ireland — which has also gone two days without a death — are always out of sync. 

NHS England today announced 129 laboratory-confirmed Covid-19 deaths in hospitals. Wales registered nine victims in all settings, followed by seven in Scotland. Northern Ireland recorded none for the third day running.

Data compiled by the statistical bodies of each of the home nations show 51,086 people died of either confirmed or suspected Covid-19 across the UK by the end of May. 

The real number of victims will be even higher because the tally only takes into account deaths that occurred up until May 31 in Scotland and May 29 in the rest of Britain, meaning it is up to 10 days out of date.

The Office for National Statistics today confirmed that 46,421 people in England and Wales died with confirmed or suspected Covid-19 by May 29.

The number of coronavirus deaths was 754 by the same day in Northern Ireland, according to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA).

National Records Scotland — which collects statistics north of the border — said 3,911 people had died across the country by May 31.

Their tallies are always 10 days behind the Department of Health (DH) because they wait until as many fatalities as possible for each date have been counted, to avoid having to revise their statistics.

By comparison, the DH announces deaths for each day as soon as it receives them, meaning they are continuously updated as more registrations filter through the system.

Because of this recording lag, the number of deaths announced on any date is significantly higher by the time the ONS has calculated it. 

The difference between the statistics agencies’ total and the Department of Health total for May 29 is around 33.8 per cent (51,074 compared to 38,161).

If the most recent death toll announced by the government was increased by the same amount it would mean that there have already been 54,100 Covid-19 victims who died. 

Data released by the ONS, the statistical body for England and Wales, also showed weekly deaths in the seven-day spell ending May 29 plummeted to the lowest rate all year. 

Only 9,824 deaths were registered in the two countries that week — still 1,600 deaths higher than what would usually be expected. 

Both England and Wales — which suffered 16,000 deaths during the darkest fortnight of the crisis in April — are now en route to the way they were before the unprecedented lockdown was imposed on March 23.

The ONS figures also showed less than a fifth of deaths registered in the week ending May 29 in England and Wales involved coronavirus — the lowest proportion since when lockdown was imposed on March 23.   

It is also the first time the proportion of weekly Covid-19 deaths has fallen to under a fifth since the week lockdown was imposed, the week ending March 27, when the virus accounted for 5 per cent of the deaths.  

REVEALED: THE 20 AREAS OF ENGLAND AND WALES WITH THE MOST COVID-19 DEATHS…

Birmingham

Leeds

County Durham

Liverpool

Sheffield

Brent

Croydon

Cheshire East

Barnet

Bradford

Wirral

Ealing

Harrow

Enfield

Manchester

Walsall

Cardiff

Sandwell

Cheshire West and Chester

Wiltshire

1,148

645

624

550

534

472

471

454

446

441

394

393

384

377

362

352

349

339

335

33

…. AND THE 20 AREAS OF ENGLAND AND WALES WITH THE FEWEST COVID-19 DEATHS 

Isles of Scilly

City of London

Ceredigion

Hastings

South Hams

West Devon

Mid Devon

Torridge

Rutland

Norwich

Ribble Valley

Lincoln

West Lindsey

North Devon

Melton

Mendip

Isle of Anglesey

Ryedale

Teignbridge

Maldon

0

4

7

9

12

15

16

19

21

21

22

22

22

26

26

26

27

28

32

32

While numbers are falling, there have been tens of thousands of ‘excess’ deaths compared to the average number of deaths over five years for the same period. 

The total number of excess deaths has passed 63,500, with Tuesday’s figures showing 57,961 excess deaths in England and Wales between March 21 and May 29 2020. 

Excess deaths are considered to be an accurate measure of the number of people killed by the pandemic because they include a broader spectrum of victims. 

As well as including people who may have died with Covid-19 without ever being tested, the data also shows how many more people died because their medical treatment was postponed, for example, or who didn’t or couldn’t get to hospital when they were seriously ill.

Nick Stripe, head of health analysis at the ONS, said some deaths involving coronavirus in care homes ‘will have brought forward deaths that might otherwise have happened relatively soon’.

He tweeted: ‘We might expect deaths not involving Covid in care homes to fall below 5-yr avgs (average) in the next few weeks.’

The North West, an area of concern for the rate of transmission, had the highest number of coronavirus-related deaths over the seven-day spell (282).

Slightly more than a quarter (25.6 per cent) of deaths recorded in the North East that week involved Covid-19 — the highest proportion across all of England’s regions.

While there was a decrease in the number of deaths from all causes in hospitals, care homes, private homes and hospices, the proportion of hospital deaths involving coronavirus increased.

It rose from just over half (51 per cent) in the week ending May 22 to 55.1 per cent in the week ending May 29. The rate in care homes fell from 42.1 to 38.7 per cent over the same period.

A separate study published today by the University of Manchester suggests that more than a fifth (21 per cent) of excess deaths that had taken place in England and Wales by early May were not linked to Covid-19.

The authors say these deaths were ‘driven by the inability or reluctance of people to access health services for other health needs’.

The study found the highest rate of non-Covid-19 excess deaths during this period was in the West Midlands — 26 per 100,000 population.

The West Midlands, which includes Birmingham, was followed by Eastern England (21 per 100,000) and north-west England and London (both 20 per 100,000). 

REVEALED: HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE DIED OF COVID-19 IN YOUR LOCAL AUTHORITY 
LOCAL AUTHORITY COVID-19 DEATHS LOCAL AUTHORITY COVID-19 DEATHS
Birmingham 1,148 Wycombe 101
Leeds 645 Charnwood 101
County Durham 624 Mole Valley 101
Liverpool 550 Hartlepool 100
Sheffield 534 Portsmouth 100
Brent 472 Ashford 100
Croydon 471 South Derbyshire 99
Cheshire East 454 Wealden 99
Barnet 446 Neath Port Talbot 98
Bradford 441 Wychavon 97
Wirral 394 East Hertfordshire 97
Ealing 393 Wyre 96
Harrow 384 Elmbridge 96
Enfield 377 Telford and Wrekin 95
Manchester 362 Chorley 95
Walsall 352 North Lincolnshire 93
Cardiff 349 Fareham 93
Sandwell 339 Eastleigh 92
Cheshire West and Chester 335 Broxtowe 92
Wiltshire 332 Chiltern 91
Sunderland 328 High Peak 91
Bromley 328 North Hertfordshire 91
Stockport 322 Sevenoaks 90
Wigan 319 Folkestone and Hythe 90
Redbridge 306 Stroud 89
Salford 305 Warwick 89
Hillingdon 305 Vale of Glamorgan 88
Wakefield 302 Bath and North East Somerset 87
Newham 298 Amber Valley 87
Bolton 297 Three Rivers 86
Wolverhampton 290 South Staffordshire 86
Dudley 288 Spelthorne 86
Kirklees 282 Bridgend 86
Lewisham 279 Powys 86
Derby 276 Blackburn with Darwen 85
Lambeth 271 Peterborough 85
Coventry 270 Dover 85
Havering 270 Breckland 85
Sefton 268 Surrey Heath 84
Rotherham 267 Guildford 83
Rhondda Cynon Taf 266 Tandridge 83
Solihull 262 Plymouth 82
Haringey 261 Hinckley and Bosworth 81
East Riding of Yorkshire 256 East Northamptonshire 81
Northumberland 247 Denbighshire 81
Leicester 246 Erewash 80
Oldham 240 Darlington 79
Southwark 240 Cambridge 79
Tameside 237 East Hampshire 79
Waltham Forest 237 Gravesham 79
Bristol, City of 230 Carmarthenshire 79
Northampton 229 Chesterfield 78
Central Bedfordshire 228 Rochford 78
Gateshead 226 South Ribble 78
Newcastle upon Tyne 225 Kettering 78
Hackney 221 Brentwood 77
Greenwich 219 Rushmoor 77
Hounslow 218 Fylde 77
Warrington 213 Epsom and Ewell 77
Shropshire 212 Chichester 77
Barnsley 212 Rushcliffe 76
Bexley 211 Isle of Wight 75
Nottingham 208 Scarborough 75
Trafford 208 Barrow-in-Furness 74
Wandsworth 208 Broxbourne 74
East Suffolk 204 Crawley 73
Bury 200 Fenland 71
Cornwall 198 Newark and Sherwood 71
Doncaster 198 North Warwickshire 71
Rochdale 196 Worthing 71
Merton 194 Monmouthshire 71
Swansea 194 Castle Point 70
Middlesbrough 193 Harlow 70
Luton 191 Oxford 70
Milton Keynes 191 Rugby 70
St. Helens 187 Cannock Chase 69
Basildon 184 West Suffolk 69
Tower Hamlets 183 Pendle 67
Westminster 181 Broadland 67
Epping Forest 177 Woking 67
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole 174 Derbyshire Dales 66
Hertsmere 174 Lancaster 66
Medway 173 Conwy 66
Southend-on-Sea 172 Tonbridge and Malling 65
Reigate and Banstead 169 Eastbourne 64
Stoke-on-Trent 168 Blaby 64
Sutton 168 Mid Suffolk 64
Hammersmith and Fulham 165 Torfaen 64
Kingston upon Hull, City of 163 Bracknell Forest 63
Barking and Dagenham 161 Merthyr Tydfil 63
South Gloucestershire 160 Allerdale 62
Stratford-on-Avon 159 Craven 62
Mid Sussex 159 Blaenau Gwent 62
Newport 158 Wellingborough 61
Reading 157 Mansfield 61
Swindon 156 Runnymede 61
Southampton 156 Uttlesford 60
York 155 Hambleton 60
Dorset 155 Sedgemoor 60
Camden 155 Staffordshire Moorlands 60
South Tyneside 154 North West Leicestershire 59
Harrogate 153 Arun 59
Islington 148 Gwynedd 59
North Tyneside 147 Wrexham 59
Tendring 146 Daventry 58
Brighton and Hove 145 Torbay 57
Richmond upon Thames 145 Cotswold 57
Gloucester 144 Worcester 57
South Lakeland 143 Stevenage 57
Wokingham 142 South Cambridgeshire 55
Bedford 141 Gosport 55
East Staffordshire 139 Tunbridge Wells 55
Knowsley 136 Burnley 55
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk 135 South Kesteven 55
Chelmsford 134 Redditch 55
Ashfield 132 Copeland 54
Cheltenham 131 Harborough 54
Thanet 131 Tamworth 54
Thurrock 130 Babergh 53
West Berkshire 129 Bolsover 52
North East Derbyshire 129 Hyndburn 52
Waverley 129 South Norfolk 52
Caerphilly 128 Bassetlaw 52
Aylesbury Vale 127 South Somerset 51
Nuneaton and Bedworth 127 South Bucks 50
Kingston upon Thames 126 Rossendale 50
Stockton-on-Tees 125 Rother 49
Windsor and Maidenhead 125 Oadby and Wigston 49
Bromsgrove 125 North Norfolk 49
New Forest 124 East Cambridgeshire 48
Kensington and Chelsea 121 South Holland 48
Carlisle 120 South Northamptonshire 48
Vale of White Horse 119 Malvern Hills 46
Newcastle-under-Lyme 119 Forest of Dean 45
North Somerset 118 East Devon 44
Ipswich 118 East Lindsey 44
St Albans 118 Somerset West and Taunton 44
Redcar and Cleveland 117 Corby 43
Blackpool 117 Hart 42
Dacorum 115 Richmondshire 42
Herefordshire, County of 113 Selby 41
Preston 113 North Kesteven 40
Gedling 113 Pembrokeshire 40
Cherwell 113 Great Yarmouth 39
Watford 112 Adur 39
West Oxfordshire 112 Eden 38
Wyre Forest 111 Exeter 38
South Oxfordshire 110 North East Lincolnshire 34
Braintree 109 Boston 33
Flintshire 109 Teignbridge 32
West Lancashire 108 Maldon 32
Lichfield 108 Ryedale 28
Calderdale 108 Isle of Anglesey 27
Test Valley 107 North Devon 26
Halton 106 Melton 26
Basingstoke and Deane 106 Mendip 26
Swale 106 Ribble Valley 22
Havant 105 Lincoln 22
Stafford 105 West Lindsey 22
Horsham 105 Rutland 21
Slough 104 Norwich 21
Huntingdonshire 104 Torridge 19
Colchester 104 Mid Devon 16
Winchester 104 West Devon 15
Maidstone 104 South Hams 12
Lewes 103 Hastings 9
Welwyn Hatfield 103 Ceredigion 7
Tewkesbury 102 City of London 4
Canterbury 102 Isles of Scilly 0
Dartford 102 SOURCE: Office for National Statistics