Britain records 28 more coronavirus deaths in preliminary toll

Britain today announced 28 more coronavirus deaths in the preliminary toll as separate data revealed the number of people dying has dropped to the lowest since mid-March. 

Department of Health chiefs have yet to confirm the final daily figure, which is often much higher because it takes into account lab-confirmed fatalities in all settings. The early count — which only includes a fraction of the Covid-19 deaths in England — is calculated by adding up updates declared by each of the home nations.

NHS England today posted 26 deaths in hospitals across the country. Two fatalities were recorded in all settings in Wales but none were registered in Northern Ireland or Scotland, which has now gone six days without suffering any victims. 

Government data shows 11 fatalities were posted yesterday but counts released on Mondays are always lower due to a recording lag at weekends. For comparison, 155 Covid-19 deaths were registered last Tuesday and the rolling seven-day average stood at 95 — up from the current figure of 83.

It comes as separate data today revealed the number of people dying of coronavirus rose in Wales during the first week of July for the first time since April, adding to mounting fears that the UK’s outbreak is no longer fading as the nation gets used to post-lockdown freedom.

Alarming government figures yesterday also revealed the average number of new cases had jumped six per cent in the first week-on-week rise since early May. The spike came little more than a week after Britain took the first steps back to normal life, after Number 10 finally relaxed strict lockdown rules in a desperate bid to kick-start the economy. 

But other promising government data released today also showed the number of deaths has continued to fall in every region of England, the number of fatalities from all causes has now been below average for three weeks, and just 381 deaths were recorded during the week that ended July 3 — the fewest since mid-March.  

A further 21 people have died from coronavirus in 24 hours bringing the UK’s total death toll to 44,819 

Department of Health figures released yesterday showed 144,000 tests were carried out or posted the day before. The number includes 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 for a month — since May 22.

Health chiefs also reported 530 more cases of Covid-19. Government statistics show the official size of the UK’s  outbreak now stands at 289,603 cases. 

But the actual size of the outbreak, which began to spiral out of control in March, is estimated to be in the millions, based on antibody testing data.

It meant the rolling average of daily cases increased for the third day in a row to 624 — up from 590 last Monday, which was 34 per cent lower than the same day the week before.

The last time the UK suffered an increase in its average number of daily cases was on May 7, when 5,600 Brits were diagnosed with Covid-19 and the spike was blamed on more people being swabbed for the infection.

The daily death 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 updates provided by the home nations. Department of Health officials work off a different time cut-off, meaning daily updates from Scotland as well as Northern Ireland are always out of sync.

And the count announced by NHS England every afternoon — which only takes into account deaths in hospitals — does not match up with the DH figures because they work off a different recording system.

For instance, some deaths announced by NHS England bosses will have already been counted by the Department of Health, which records fatalities ‘as soon as they are available’. 

More than 1,000 infected Brits died each day during the darkest days of the crisis in mid-April but the number of victims had been dropping by around 20 to 30 per cent week-on-week since the start of May. 

WEEKLY CHANGES IN DEATHS IN ENGLAND AND WALES 

Region 

North East

North West

Yorkshire

East Mids

West Mids

East of E

London

South East

South West

Wales 

 W/E June 26

28

110

68

75

68

58

32

78

18

26 

 W/E July 3

17

73

47

39

39

51

20

56

9

30 

 % change

-39%

-34%

-31%

-48%

-43%

-12%

-38%

-28%

-50%

+15%

 

It comes as official statistics today revealed the number of people dying of coronavirus rose in Wales during the first week of July for the first time since April.

Thirty people died with Covid-19 in the seven-day spell between June 27 to July 3, according to Office for National Statistics (ONS) data — up from 26 a week earlier.

But the government data also showed the number of confirmed or suspected coronavirus deaths has continued to fall in every region of England, suggesting the outbreak may still be slowing down.

Other promising figures showed the number of people dying of all causes has now been below average for three weeks in England and Wales and just 381 deaths were recorded in that week — the fewest since mid-March.

Hospital and care home deaths are still lower than would normally be expected at this time of year — but deaths in people’s own homes remain higher, by 755 in the first week of July.

And the number of Covid-19 deaths registered each week — by when they were counted as opposed to when they actually happened — has also fallen to its lowest level for 15 weeks.

According to the data from the ONS, the number of deaths registered in England and Wales involving Covid-19 in the week ending July 3 — known as week 27 — was 532. 

The report said: ‘The number of death registrations involving the coronavirus (Covid-19) decreased from 606 in Week 26 to 532 in Week 27, the lowest number of Covid-19 deaths registered since Week 12, week ending March 20, when 103 deaths involved Covid-19. 

‘Of all deaths registered in Week 27, 5.8 per cent mentioned Covid-19, down from 6.7 per cent in Week 26.’ 

The number of deaths happening each week has also fallen to the lowest level for 16 weeks. This takes into account when the people actually died and not when their death was registered by officials, which makes it more accurate.  

ONS data revealed a total 381 deaths actually happened during the most recent seven-day spell, down from 561 the week before. 

One month ago, in the week to June 5, there were 1,289 deaths recorded. And during the height of the crisis, more than 8,000 people were dying every week.

The statistics confirm that the Covid-19 outbreak in England and Wales is dramatically smaller than it was only five weeks ago.

During that time lockdown rules have been lifted and testing surveys suggest that the speed at which the epidemic is shrinking has plateaued, according to several different sets of data.  

Millions flocked to pubs to celebrate ‘Super Saturday’ last weekend to celebrate the easing of the draconian measures — despite warnings from top scientists that it would cause another spike in cases.

Government figures yesterday suggested that Britain’s coronavirus outbreak may be getting worse after the average number of new cases jumped six per cent in the first week-on-week rise since early May.  

BRITAIN’S COVID-19 OUTBREAK MAY BE GETTING WORSE, DATA SHOWS 

Britain’s coronavirus outbreak may be getting worse as alarming government figures yesterday revealed the average number of new cases has jumped six per cent in the first week-on-week rise since early May — but the daily death toll has dipped to a 17-week low. 

Department of Health data showed 530 more Britons tested positive for the life-threatening disease, meaning the rolling average of daily infections had increased for the third day in a row to 624 — up from 590 last Monday, which was 34 per cent lower than the same day the week before.

The last time the UK suffered an increase in its average number of daily cases was on May 7, when 5,600 Britons were diagnosed with Covid-19 and the spike was blamed on more people being swabbed for the infection after officials finally ramped up the mass-testing scheme.

The data a little more than a week after Britain took the first steps back to normal life, after Number 10 finally relaxed strict lockdown rules in a desperate bid to kick-start the economy. Millions flocked to pubs to celebrate ‘Super Saturday’ — despite warnings from top scientists that it would cause another spike in cases.

Today’s ONS report also confirmed that at least 50,698 people had died of suspected or confirmed Covid-19 in England and Wales by July 3. 

The National Records of Scotland (NRS) recorded 4,173 deaths by July 5, while the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) added 835.

This means at least 55,706 people in the UK had died of coronavirus 10 days ago — a number that is significantly higher than the government’s official tally.

The Department of Health has so far only counted 44,830 of those because it has missed off thousands who were never able to get tested. 

Today’s data comes after a release last week confirmed that England’s coronavirus outbreak is still shrinking and the number of new cases each day had more than halved in a week.

An ONS testing scheme estimated 1,700 people are getting infected with Covid-19 each day outside of hospitals and care homes — down from 3,500 a week earlier.

The estimate — based on eight new cases out of 25,000 people who are swabbed regularly — also claimed there are just 14,000 people who are currently infected. 

This is the equivalent of 0.03 per cent of the population of the whole country, or one in every 3,900 people. It is down from 0.04 per cent the week before and 0.09 per cent a week earlier. 

Separate figures, from King’s College London, suggest the outbreak in England has stopped shrinking — but its estimate is lower than the ONS’s at around 1,200 new cases per day.

Department of Health chiefs have announced an average of just 624 new positive test results per day for the past week — but up to half of infected patients are thought to never show symptoms. 

A report by Public Health England and the University of Cambridge predicted last Monday that the true number of daily cases is more like 5,300 but could even be as high as 7,600. 

HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE REALLY DIED OF THE CORONAVIRUS?

Department of Health: 44,830

Department of Health’s latest death count for all settings stands at 44,830.

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. 

It also only takes into account patients who tested positive for the virus, as opposed to deaths suspected to be down to the coronavirus. Many people were not tested early on in the outbreak, meaning thousands are suspected to be missing from the total.

National statistical bodies: 55,706

Data compiled by the statistical bodies of each of the home nations show 55,706 people died of either confirmed or suspected Covid-19 across the UK by the end of May.

The Office for National Statistics confirmed that 50,698 people in England and Wales died with confirmed or suspected Covid-19 by July 3.

The number of coronavirus deaths was 835 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 4,173 people had died across the country by July 5.

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.

Excess deaths: 64,698 

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.

Data from England and Wales shows there has been an extra 58,830 deaths between March 27 and July 3, as well as 4,867 in Scotland, and 1,001 in Northern Ireland.

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