Britain’s daily Covid cases plummeted 22 per cent today while hospitalisations and deaths fell by a tenth as the Omicron wave continues to subside.
Government data shows another 51,899 people across the home nations tested positive, a drop of more than a fifth in a week. Infections have now dropped to levels seen at the start of December, before the ultra-infectious Omicron variant took off.
The number of Covid-infected people admitted to hospital is down 13.1 per cent in a week. The figure has been falling for more than a fortnight.
And virus fatalities, which have been trending downwards for more than a week, dropped 11.2 per cent in the last seven days.
It comes as figures released today by the Office for National Statistics show that just 11 children died from Covid during the first year of the pandemic.
The virus was mentioned on the death certificates of 13 people under the age of 15 in England and Wales in 2020, and was the underlying cause in 11 of them, according to the ONS.
Ministers last night approved Covid vaccines for all children aged five to 11 after months of deliberation among the Government’s advisers, but the roll-out will proceed on a ‘non-urgent’ basis in acknowledgement of their very low risk.
Experts from Cambridge University who are tracking the UK’s Covid situation estimate that children have just a 0.001 per cent risk of dying from Covid if they catch it – compared to up to 3 per cent in older groups
The daily data from the UK Health Security Agency shows 40,376 people in England tested positive, while 7,144 individuals had an infection confirmed in Scotland. Another 1,352 people cases were detected in Wales and 3,027 people tested positive in Northern Ireland.
Latest testing figures show 17 per cent fewer swabs were carried out across the UK compared to last week.
But the positivity rate — the proportion of swabs that detect the virus — is also trending downwards, suggesting that the fall in cases is genuine and not just down to fewer tests.
Hospitalisation data shows 11,721 people infected with the virus were occupying beds at 8am this morning — the lowest level in seven weeks.
And 303 Covid patients were in intensive care in England today — the fewest in more than seven months.
More than nine in 10 people aged 12 and over have had at least one Covid vaccine, while 84.9 per cent are double-jabbed and two-thirds are boosted.
It comes after ONS data today showed there were 3,015 deaths in England and Wales in 2020 among infants and children aged 28 days to 15 years. This was the lowest number of infant and child deaths since records began in 1980.
Covid was behind less than one per cent of all deaths among children that year, the data suggests. The virus was mentioned on the death certificates of 13 people under the age of 15 in England and Wales in 2020, and was the underlying cause in 11 of them.
While the ONS data only covers 2020, figures from the Government’s own dashboard suggest there have been 65 Covid deaths among children in England since the start of the pandemic.
This dataset is different from the ONS’ because it looks at all deaths within 28 days of a positive test, regardless of the actual cause — meaning theoretically even car crash victims can be included.
Experts estimate that around 85 per cent of British children have now had Covid and that their risk of dying from Covid is around 0.001 per cent, and even lower when youngsters with underlying health conditions are excluded. The ONS report did not reveal whether any of the 11 victims had any pre-existing ailments that left them at more risk.
Congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities remained the leading cause of death among children aged 28 days to 15 years, followed by tumours.
The child mortality rate for the latest year was 7.0 deaths per 100,000 population of the same age. It has steadily fallen from a rate of 33.0 per 100,000 in 1981.
The mortality rate for babies under one in the latest year was 3.6 deaths per 1,000 live births, which has remained stable since 2014, within an overall general decline over the past four decades.
This is likely to reflect general improvements in healthcare, and specifically in antenatal and neonatal care, the ONS said.
Infant mortality rates were highest in the West Midlands (5.3 deaths per 1,000 live births) and lowest in the East and South West (2.9 per 1,000)
The mortality rate for babies under one in the latest year was 3.6 deaths per 1,000 live births, which has remained fairly stable since 2014, within an overall general decline over the past four decades
Black babies had the highest neonatal and infant mortality rates. Among those from a black Caribbean background, the rate was 4.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared with 2.1 per 1,000 for white British babies
There were 3.8 stillbirths per 1,000 births in 2020, unchanged from the previous year. The Government’s ambition is to halve the stillbirth rate by 2025 compared with 2010, to 2.6 per 1,000 births
The mortality rate for babies under 28 days (the neonatal mortality rate) was 2.7 deaths per 1,000 live births – which has remained stable since 2016.
Black babies had the highest neonatal and infant mortality rates. Among those from a black Caribbean background, the rate was 4.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared with 2.1 per 1,000 for white British babies.
In 2020, the 10 per cent most deprived areas in England had higher infant mortality rates than the 10 per cent least deprived areas.
There were 3.8 stillbirths per 1,000 births in 2020, unchanged from the previous year. The Government’s ambition is to halve the stillbirth rate by 2025 compared with 2010, to 2.6 per 1,000 births.
Separate analysis of ONS figures suggests 14 children in England and Wales have died from the milder Omicron variant, which sent infection levels among youngsters to astronomical levels.
The ONS data, collected weekly, reveals the virus has been involved in the deaths of five babies and five 10-14 year olds since mid-November.
Meanwhile, three infants aged between one and four, and just one child aged between five and nine have died in the same time-frame.
The ONS data that covers child deaths in the Omicron wave does not differentiate whether Covid was the primary cause of deaths or just a contributing factor.
Omicron being incredibly infectious but far milder than older variants has made it difficult to interpret coronavirus deaths and hospital admissions.
Because it has been so rife in the community, hospitals have seen a huge rise in the share of patients or victims who were primarily sick with something else but happened to be infected.
Half of all coronavirus inpatients in hospitals are mainly ill with something else, NHS data shows, and a third of Covid deaths are not primarily the virus, according to the latest ONS weekly mortality report. Even if the virus wasn’t the underlying cause of death, it may still play a contributing role, experts insist.
The data comes after the JCVI announced that healthy children across the UK aged five to 11 can be offered two Covid jabs, at a smaller dose and spaced out 12 weeks apart.
The panel said the vaccines will protect a ‘very small number of children from serious illness and hospitalisation’ and futureproof them against future waves of the pandemic.
Roughly 5million more children are now eligible for the jabs and will get them 12 weeks apart. The Government aims to offer a first dose to all eligible children by April.
The JCVI has stressed the Covid jabs shouldn’t be prioritised over other childhood vaccinations in this age group. It highlighted that MMR and HPV vaccine uptake has plummeted during the pandemic, believed to be due to the emphasis placed on the Covid jab rollout.
Its deputy chair Professor Anthony Harnden, an expert in primary care, told the BBC: ‘In terms of priority, we’ve taken pains to emphasise in the statement that we still think that there’s been a drop-off on MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) and HPV (human papillomavirus) vaccines.
‘So, routine children’s vaccines should be of priority, but of course this is a one-off pandemic response. We’re not saying that this Covid vaccine should be offered to children on a routine basis.
‘Routine vaccines are still extremely important and we need to increase coverage.’
He added: ‘We do believe that it’s important to future-proof children and actually giving parents the choice of an offer of vaccine, even though a considerable number of them will have already been exposed to Covid, will give them potential broader immunity moving forward should there be a future wave or a new variant arises.’
But only half of children aged 12 to 15 have received a Covid vaccine in England and just a fifth have had two doses – raising questions about public demand for the move.
The JCVI believes around 85 per cent of primary school-aged children have already had Covid and have some immunity.
Unlike with previous expansions of the vaccine rollout, the JCVI’s update made no mention of the jabs’ impact on infection rates.
Two doses have been shown to offer as little as 10 per cent protection against Omicron, but immunity against moderate and severe disease is much higher.
The JCVI explored whether the vaccines could prevent disruptions to children’s education by preventing mild disease but said there was not enough evidence.
It said the main purpose of the jabs is to act as a safeguard in case a new variant emerges that is more dangerous to children.
Officials estimate that for every million five to 11-year-olds double-vaccinated, 100 hospital admissions will be averted — if there is a more severe wave in future.
This would also prevent three ICU admissions and 58 cases of an inflammatory condition suffered by a very small number of children who get Covid.
If there is an even milder wave than the current Omicron outbreak, a million second doses could prevent 17 hospital admissions, around one ICU admission and 10 cases of paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome (PIMS).
Whereas for every million doses administered, just two cases of myocarditis could be expected.
Concerns about the rare form of heart inflammation was one of the reasons the JCVI held off for so long on recommending the jabs for youngsters.
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