Coronavirus: UK announces 4,712 cases and 65 deaths

Boris Johnson today shot down more calls to end lockdown sooner as Britain recorded fewer coronavirus cases than at any time since late September with 4,712 more positive tests.

And the 65 more deaths caused by Covid-19 is the lowest number since October 12 and marks a drop of 38 per cent on last Monday. Cases fell by 14 per cent in a week.

The promising numbers come as Boris Johnson today announced the ‘first step on the roadmap’, hailing it as a ‘big day’, with schools reopening and indoor care home visits now permitted in England, but faced more pressure from anti-lockdown MPs.

Dr Jenny Harries, Public Health England’s deputy chief medical officer, said in a Downing Street press conference today that the data show a ‘pleasing picture’ and the Covid Recovery Group of Tory MPs said it would look ‘odd’ if the country were still in lockdown even as cases and deaths head close to zero.  

Batting away zealous calls to for No 10 to speed up the route back to normality, however,  Dr Harries said infection rates across the UK were now back to where they were in September but warned: ‘This is the level at which a new wave could easily take off again from.’

And she said there is ‘still a substantial strain on the NHS, and not one we can afford to rise from again’.

Mr Johnson said he was embracing a ‘big budget of risk’ taking today’s step of the wholesale reopening of schools, admitting it was inevitable that letting children back into classrooms would cause cases to rise, and refused to budge on his ‘cautious but irreversible’ plans.

Almost 22.4million people have been vaccinated with at least one dose of a Covid jab, with 164,143 more immunised yesterday, along with 20,241 second doses.

Dr Harries said the vaccination programme was making ‘extremely fast progress’ but said officials were still waiting to see concrete evidence of national hospital admission rates staying down as a result of the jabs.  

Boris Johnson held a press conference today to hail the ‘first step on the roadmap’ as schools across England reopened, indoor care home visits were brought back and people allowed to socialise outdoors in pairs

Today marks the first loosening of lockdown rules in three months, with children returning to school classrooms across England.

Ministers have insisted this marks the end of the home-schooling era, with the PM insisting this route out of lockdown will be ‘cautious but irreversible’. 

But he is resisting calls for rules to be relaxed sooner.  

Sounding worried that outbreaks are surging again in Europe – a development that was a precursor to the UK’s second wave – Mr Johnson said that infections are still higher than they were before restrictions came in last year.

The Covid Recovery Group, a band of anti-lockdown Tory MPs, is still demanding that the Government release measures sooner, said it would be ‘odd’ if England is still in lockdown when coronavirus cases and deaths get close to zero. 

‘With the speed that we’re seeing deaths, hospitalisations and infections drop, I think when we get to the end of April it’s going to look a bit odd that the Government’s roadmap still has another two months nearly to run,’ the group’s chief Mark Harper told BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour.

‘And I think if it believes in data not dates, as the data improves the Government should bring forward the roadmap rather than be tied to the dates it’s already set out.’

Tory ex-minister David Jones told MailOnline: ‘At the moment it is pretty clear we are getting on top of the virus.

‘The vaccination programme is remarkably good… I am not a scientist but I would have thought that the government must star to think about an accelerated timetable of the restrictions that we have got at the moment.’

Hitting back at pressure from these MPs, Mr Johnson said today: ‘On the acceleration of the roadmap… people have asked us to do this many times and, of course, I understand the urgency people feel, but we have to be driven by the data – we have to look at the rates of infection.

‘Don’t forget they’re still very high by the standards of last year, we still have thousands of people in hospital with Covid. And we’ve seen, alas, in other European countries the curve is going up again.

‘And we remember quite frankly – every time we’ve seen those upwards curves in our friends and neighbours – that it’s not too long after that that we see an increase in this country as well.

‘And so we’ve just got to remain prudent and the whole point of this roadmap is that it’s intended to be cautious but irreversible. And we think we can do that because of the success of the vaccine rollout.

‘But I think people would really trade some urgency and some haste in favour of security and certainty about these dates we’ve set out – April the 12th, May the 17th and so on.’

He added: ‘I agree that there has been some encouraging signs [in the data] but the whole point is last summer, we had the disease down to levels down to much below where it is today, and we saw what happened with the spike.

‘I think it’s fantastic that the vaccine rollout is proving so successful, but don’t forget there is a big budget of risk in opening schools in the way we are today, that’s just inevitable.

‘We think it’s manageable, we think it’s right, we think we’re prudent to be doing what we are.

‘As I say I think the biggest risk is not opening schools… but we’ll continue to take a cautious and prudent approach because I think that is really what British business would really rather see – a cautious and irreversible approach rather than a hasty approach that we have to reverse.’