Coronavirus cases in England rise to seven-week high with 4,200 people getting infected every day

Coronavirus cases in England are now at the highest levels since May and government scientists are ‘no longer confident’ the crucial R rate is below the dreaded level of one. 

Government statisticians today admitted there is ‘now enough evidence’ to prove Covid-19 infections are on the up, estimating that 4,200 people are now catching the virus each day in England alone.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS), which tracks the size of the outbreak by swabbing thousands of people, said the number of new daily cases was just 1,700 a fortnight ago.

One in 1,500 people currently have the coronavirus – 0.07 per cent of the population. The figure does not include care homes and hospitals.

Boris Johnson today said they ‘can’t ignore this evidence’ as he announced he was ‘squeezing the brake pedal’ on easing the coronavirus lockdown.

The Prime Minister warning coronavirus cases have started to ‘creep up’ and as a result the Government has no choice but to delay the further reopening of the economy.

Number 10’s scientific advisers today also upped the R rate in the UK, saying they now believe it stands between 0.8 and 0.9. It had been as low as 0.7 since May.

SAGE also revealed the growth rate – the average number of people each Covid-19 patient infects – may have jumped to above one in the South West, home to the stay-cation hotspots of Devon, Cornwall and Dorset.

And they said it was likely to be equally high in the North West. Matt Hancock last night announced tough new lockdown measures in Greater Manchester and parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire. 

The government is tracking the ‘R number’ – how many people someone with Covid-19 is likely to spread the virus to – across the country to see the impact of easing lockdown restrictions.

If the R rate is below one, the spread slowly decreases. But above one, there is the potential for cases to spiral out of control – as was seen in March. Anything above one could lead to restrictions being reimposed. 

SAGE does not have confidence that R is currently below one in England based on modelling that uses Covid-19 testing data.

Their predictions suggest the R rate is between 08 and 1.1 in the North West – some parts of which were given new, harder coronavirus restrictions last night after a surge in cases.

Some 4.5million people living in Greater Manchester and parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire were ordered to avoid mixing with any other households indoors or in a garden as the Government tries to slow the spread of the deadly disease following a spike in cases. 

The R rate also appears to be above one in the South West, and the Health Secretary this morning said action would need to be taken in the region if the situation worsens.

Speaking on Sky News this morning, Matt Hancock said: ‘In the South West and South East, the number of cases is lower but we don’t shy away from taking that action where it is necessary.’

It comes as separate data released today revealed the coronavirus outbreak in England is growing, with an additional 1,400 people are catching the disease every day compared to last week.

The data, from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) is considered to be some of the most accurate available. It estimates how many people have the coronavirus infection in the community, and not hospitals and care homes.

HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE THE VIRUS IN EACH REGION? 

The percentage of people in the population who have the coronavirus:

North East: 0.05%

North West: 0.05%

Yorkshire and the Humber: 0.06%

East Midlands: 0.07%

West Midlands: 0.05%

East of England: 0.06%

London: 0.13%

South East: 0.07%

South West: 0.04%

The figures are far higher than those reported by the Department of Health every day, as this data only reports Covid-19 cases confirmed with a lab-read test.

ONS collect data from swab tests sent regularly to people’s homes to test whether they are infected with the virus at the time. The people are chosen to be representative of the UK population. 

The organisation follows trends over a six-week period. This week’s update was based on the results of 116,026 swab tests collected over six weeks. During these weeks, 59 individuals from 58 households tested positive.  

Only very small numbers of people test positive in any given period, which creates a wide range of possible estimates for the ONS to choose from about how many people in the community have the virus. 

During the most recent week (July 20 to July 26), ONS estimates that around 4,200 people became newly infected with Covid-19 per day. It could be as low as 2,200 or as high as 8,100 based on their calculations.  

The possible range in this week’s estimate is between 23,700 to 53,200 – up from the 18,500 to 39,900 reported last week, and the 15,000 and 34,000 a fortnight ago. This does not include patients in hospitals or care home residents, who cannot be tested at home.  

‘There is now evidence to suggest a slight increase in the number of people in England testing positive on a nose and throat swab in recent weeks,’ the report today said.

It follows a low point of cases in June, when 0.06 per cent of the population were infected in the week ending June 18, a drastic drop from the 0.25 per cent measured in mid-May.

The statement came after several weeks of saying the evidence was not strong enough to confirm the outbreak was growing.  

The Government last night announced it was reimposing partial lockdown measures on 4.5 million people living in Greater Manchester and parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire. Pictured are the weekly infection rates (cases per 100,000 people) in each upper tier local authority

The Government last night announced it was reimposing partial lockdown measures on 4.5 million people living in Greater Manchester and parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire. Pictured are the weekly infection rates (cases per 100,000 people) in each upper tier local authority 

Fears the coronavirus crisis is growing have been bubbling for several days based on Covid-19 test results, leaving ministers to admit they were concerned about a second wave.

Yesterday, health chiefs reported a further 846 people across the UK had tested positive for the life-threatening virus, which was up from the 763 recorded on Wednesday.

The figures, which bring the government total number of UK coronavirus cases to 302,301, reveal that daily infections have risen by 12 per cent in a week with the rolling average hitting a four-week high.  

ONS reported today ‘there is not enough evidence to say with confidence whether COVID-19 infection rates differ by region in England, nor whether infection rates have increased in different regions over the past six weeks’.

It added there is some limited evidence that rates in London may have increased in recent weeks. But again the team is not certain because the numbers are so small, the degree of uncertainty is high.

Some 0.13 per cent of people in London are thought to currently infected, up from the 0.09 per cent reported last week.  

Boris Johnson today announced he is ‘squeezing the brake pedal’ on easing the coronavirus lockdown just hours before the scheduled August 1 return of casinos, bowling alleys and so-called close contact services like beauticians.  

Top scientists insist Britain must learn to live with the virus and control flare-ups through measures No 10 already has in its locker. Businesses fear another blanket lockdown – which the Prime Minister admitted he doesn’t want to use – would cause even more catastrophic damage to an economy already in tatters. 

HOW HAS THE R RATE CHANGED IN THE UK?

AREA

ENGLAND  

UK

EAST 

LONDON

MIDLANDS

NORTH EAST 

NORTH WEST

SOUTH EAST

SOUTH WEST 

THIS WEEK

0.8-1.0

0.8-0.9 

 

0.7-1.0

0.8-1.0

0.7-0.9

0.7-0.9

0.8-1.1

0.8-1.0

0.8-1.1 

LAST WEEK 

0.8-1.0

0.7-0.9 

0.8-1.0

0.8-1.0

0.7-1.0

0.8-1.0

0.7-1.0

0.8-1.0

0.7-1.0 

HOW HAS THE GROWTH RATE CHANGED?

AREA

ENGLAND 

UK

EAST 

LONDON

MIDLANDS

NORTH EAST 

NORTH WEST

SOUTH EAST

SOUTH WEST 

THIS WEEK  

-4% to -1%

-4% to -1% 

— 

-6% to -1% 

-4% to 0% 

-6% to -2% 

-6% to -2% 

-5% to +1% 

-3% to 0% 

-4% to +1% 

LAST WEEK 

-4% to 0% 

-4% to -1% 

-3% to +2% 

-5% to +1% 

-5% to 0% 

-4% to 0% 

-5% to -1% 

-3% to +1% 

-5% to +2% 

The government tally for daily new cases. This includes only those confirmed by a lab test

The government tally for daily new cases. This includes only those confirmed by a lab test