Covid cases in England may be on the rise, ONS data shows

Covid cases in England may be on the rise: ONS data shows almost 50,000 people were infected on any day last week in 20% rise… despite separate figures showing national outbreak is flat amid Indian variant fears

  • Office for National Statistics random swabbing found almost 50,000 people had Covid last week
  • For comparison, there were 40,800 people who were thought to be infected the previous week
  • Public Health England found Covid cases had dropped in every region except the North West last week
  • Separate analysis from King’s College London showed the number of Britons getting Covid had changed little

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England’s Covid outbreak may be on the rise amid surging cases of the Indian variant, Government statisticians estimated today despite separate data suggesting the national outbreak is flat.

Office for National Statistics random swabbing found almost 50,000 people were infected with the virus on any day last week, up 20 per cent on the previous seven-day spell.

The national body, whose estimates are watched closely by ministers, warned that it was starting to see a ‘potential increase’ despite infections remaining low overall at just one in 1,110.

Its head of analytics for the Covid infection survey Sarah Crofts said: ‘Although we have seen an early indication of a potential increase in England, rates remain low and it is too soon to say if this is the start of a trend.’ 

But the figures came after data yesterday suggested the opposite, allaying fears the Indian variant was spiralling out of control.

Public Health England found Covid cases had dropped in every region except the North West and in every age group except 5 to 9-year-olds. 

Separate analysis from King’s College London found 2,270 Britons were catching symptomatic Covid last week, barely a change from the previous seven-day spell.

PHE revealed there were 3,424 cases of the Indian variant identified yesterday, up 15 per cent in 24 hours. But Boris Johnson remains confident it should not derail plans for June 21 ‘freedom day’ because it is not thought to be as transmissible as first feared.

Covid cases are only surging in three of 23 hotspots for the Indian variant — Bolton, Blackburn and Bedford — but are remaining flat in others and even falling in two — Sefton and South Northamptonshire. 

INDIAN VARIANT BEHIND QUARTER OF CASES IN THE CAPITAL

Almost a quarter of all coronavirus transmission in London last month was driven by ‘variants of concern’, data suggests.

Scientists tracking the spread of mutant Covid strains estimated about 25 per cent of cases in the capital were variants other than the dominant Kent version by mid-April.

At that time, the Indian variant was being imported into the UK via people returning from Covid-stricken India in a dash to beat the UK’s travel ban from Delhi.

The researchers said the bulk of the new variant cases were likely the Indian B.1.617.2 strain, which has since spread rapidly across Britain and gained a foothold in parts of London and the North West.

But they said surge testing for the South African variant in South London will have also made up a significant proportion of the cases. A smaller number of people tested positive for the Brazilian P.1 variant and other strains circulating less widely.

Imperial College London researchers drew on data from the UK’s variant-tracking laboratories, national infection surveys and the Government’s centralised testing programme.

They said it was likely that concerning variants now make up more than 25 per cent of Covid cases in the UK because of how rapidly the Indian strain is spreading.

There have already been almost 3,500 cases of the mutant strain, according to Public Health England’s most recent count on May 19, which is five times more than at the start of this month.

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) believe the Indian strain is far more transmissible than the already highly virulent Kent variant but the group has ‘increasing confidence’ vaccines work well against it.

But MailOnline’s analysis of official numbers show just three of the 23 places in England where the Indian variant has become dominant are seeing clear rises in infection rates.

Dr Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at Reading University, told this website that the mutant strain would not be the ‘disaster’ initially feared because it appeared to be confined to pockets of the country.

For example, there were just 2,874 Covid infections across Britain yesterday – which was in line with the case rate for the past month – and 10 per cent of all infections were in Bolton, where the Indian variant is spreading fastest.

But the number of patients in hospital with the virus in the Greater Manchester town is creeping up and Bolton NHS Foundation Trust has opened an extra Covid ward. There are now 30 patients being treated for the disease after five more were admitted yesterday.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the ‘majority’ of the patients were unvaccinated and among the few who had been given a jab, they had not been for their second appointment.

Blackburn has also seen a spike in cases following surge testing in the area, accounting for 5 per cent of the UK’s total infections, as has Bedford, where a secondary school has resorted back to remote learning due to the outbreak.

It came after PHE revealed last night that it had detected another mutant Covid variant in Yorkshire and the Humber, which it has assigned as a ‘Variant Under Investigation’.

The strain — temporarily named AV.1 — has been spotted 49 times so far and there is currently no evidence that it causes more severe disease or renders vaccines less effective. Its effect on transmission is not yet understood.

Some newspapers carried reports of the new strain being a ‘triple mutant’ variant because it appears to have three key mutations. But Cambridge University immunologist Brian Ferguson described that description as ‘meaningless’, pointing out that the Kent variant has 23 mutations which separate it from the original strain that emerged in China. 

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The ONS infection survey is seen as the gold-standard for tracking the Covid outbreak by ministers, because it relies on random swabbing of more than 100,000 people.

This means it is able to capture asymptomatic cases — which trigger no symptoms and are thought to make up a third of all cases — and infections among those who don’t get tested for fear of having to self-isolate.

Covid cases did not fall in any of England’s nine regions last week, results from the infection survey suggest. 

They may have risen slightly in the North East, Yorkshire and the Humber, West Midlands, East of England and the South East, results showed, but still remained at very low levels.

London and the North West — which are hotspots for the Indian variant — were both estimated to have seen their Covid cases remain flat last week.

Across age groups Covid cases were only predicted to have risen among 35 to 49-year-olds and over-70s, but remained at very low levels with a positivity rate of 0.15 and 0.11 per cent respectively.

They fell among 12 to 24-year-olds (down to 0.20 per cent), and 50 to 69-year-olds (down to 0.03 per cent) who have all been offered at least one dose of the Covid vaccine.

The data came despite a separate paper from scientists tracking the spread of the Indian variant saying it was behind 20 per cent of all cases in the capital last month.

The researchers said the bulk of the new variant cases were likely the Indian B.1.617.2 strain, which has since spread rapidly across Britain and gained a foothold in parts of London and the North West.

But they said surge testing for the South African variant in South London will have also made up a significant proportion of the cases. A smaller number of people tested positive for the Brazilian P.1 variant and other strains circulating less widely.

Imperial College London researchers drew on data from the UK’s variant-tracking laboratories, national infection surveys and the Government’s centralised testing programme. 

Reams of separate data published yesterday found that cases were remaining flat across the country despite surging cases of the mutant strain.

Public Health England bosses hailed ‘hugely encouraging’ data that showed cases remained ‘stable’ nationally at around 12,000 last week, and dropped in all age groups except 5 to 9-year-olds.

Hospitalisations with the virus also fell across the country, while infection rates dipped in every region except the North West, which is struggling against an outbreak of the Indian strain.

Some 95 out of 149 local authorities — or 64 per cent —saw their Covid cases dip last week. For comparison, there were 66 that recorded a drop over the previous seven-day spell. 

But Dr Yvonne Doyle, PHE’s medical director, said the agency was concerned about the Indian variant and was ‘constantly monitoring the situation’. She added: ‘Until we know more it’s vital we don’t let our guard down too soon and remain cautious. We do not want to undo the huge progress we’ve made so far.’

Separate figures from the PHE’s weekly surveillance report showed the ten areas with the biggest Covid outbreaks were all hotspots for the Indian variant. And the NHS trust in Bolton — one of the hotspots for the mutant strain — has had to open another ward for Covid patients after a small rise in admissions, it was claimed today.

SAGE adviser and University College London epidemiologist Professor Andrew Hayward yesterday claimed the UK was at the beginning of another wave because of the rapid spread of the mutant strain. 

‘Although it was originally imported through travel to India it spread fairly effectively first of all within households after that and now more broadly within communities,’ he told BBC Breakfast. ‘So I don’t really see why it wouldn’t continue to spread in other parts of the country.’

He added: ‘Obviously we are doing everything we can to contain that, but it is likely more generalised measures may start to be needed to control it.’  

But Professor Hayward’s comments come amid growing optimism from Number 10 that the Indian variant won’t jeopardise plans to ease all lockdown restrictions on June 21, despite fears the highly-transmissible strain could scupper ‘freedom day’.

Boris Johnson told the powerful 1922 committee of Tory MPs on Wednesday he was ‘even more cautiously optimistic’ the next stage of relaxation can go ahead. He said: ‘I know there are anxieties about new variants but we can see nothing to suggest that we have to deviate from the road map.’

And more promising figures from King’s College London’s symptom-tracking app also predicted Covid cases are not rising nationally, despite surging infections in hotspots. Experts estimated around 2,750 people are falling ill with the coronavirus every day across the UK, with the figure having barely changed in a week.

Professor Tim Spector, the epidemiologist who leads the app, said B.1.617.2 ‘hasn’t altered numbers significantly’ and outbreaks remain focused in hotspots, such as Bolton. ‘While the outbreaks remain localised and UK numbers are steady and most cases appear mild, it’s highly unlikely to cause the NHS to be overrun or stop us coming out of lockdown,’ he said. 

Britain today also recorded just seven Covid deaths as the fatality toll continues to drop. Meanwhile, infections are flat with another 2,874 positive tests recorded. For comparison, 11 deaths and 2,657 cases were posted this time last week.

SAGE scientists have always warned there would be a third wave of the pandemic once restrictions were eased and more people were allowed to mix. 

But questions remain over how big the outbreak will be because vaccines will stop many people from catching the disease and being hospitalised. Government advisers don’t believe the resurgence will be anywhere near as bad as January’s crisis because of jabs and warmer weather.

Almost 3,000 cases of the Indian variant have been detected in the UK, with the figure having quadrupled in a fortnight. Surge testing has been deployed in Bedford, Burnley, Hounslow, Kirklees, Leicester and North Tyneside to root out cases of the strain.

It comes as ministers accelerate the vaccination roll-out with plans to reach all over-18s within a month, with over-30s set to be offered their first dose by the end of May. More than 36.9million Britons — or seven in ten adults — have already had at least a jab. England’s roll-out was expanded to 34 and 35-year-olds today.  

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