Daily Covid cases continue to plummet: Infections fall by another FIFTH to 32,322
Daily Covid cases continue to plummet: Infections fall by another FIFTH to 32,322 but deaths rise again with 57 more victims — as NHS boss is scorned for exaggerating virus stats
The Department of Health posted another 32,322 infections today, a drop of 19.4 per cent on last MondayMeanwhile, 57 people died within 28 days of testing positive, a week-on-week jump of 42.5 per cent NHS England chief executive claimed ’14 times’ more Covid patients in hospital now than ‘this time last year’But figures show 800 admissions and 7,000 inpatients in England now compared to 1,300 and 11,000 in 2020NHS England was later forced to clarify that Ms Pritchard was referring to statistics from earlier this autumnPrime Minister urged people to get boosters warning ‘too many’ elderly double-jabbed Brits are hospitalised
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Daily Covid infections in the UK continued to plummet today, bolstering hopes that the third wave may have already peaked.
The Department of Health posted another 32,322 positive tests across the country in the last 24 hours, down 19.4 per cent last Monday. Cases have dropped week-on-week on all but one day since October 24.
Meanwhile, 57 people died within 28 days of testing positive, which marked a rise on the 40 last week. Deaths lag a few weeks behind cases due to the time it takes for someone to become seriously unwell after catching Covid.
But experts expect fatalities and hospital rates to soon follow cases. New hospital admission data is expected later in the week.
It comes after NHS England boss Amanda Pritchard came under fire for suggesting 14 times as many Covid-infected Britons were in hospital compared to last year, when the figure is actually lower.
The claim was picked up and circulated by a number of mainstream, left-leaning news outlets including Sky News, ITV and The i.
Ms Pritchard made the comments as she urged people to come forward for their booster vaccines and warned the health service was under ‘very real pressure’.
Yet latest data from the Government’s dashboard shows there were 800 average daily coronavirus admissions and 7,000 inpatients in England on Friday.
This time in November 2020, for comparison, the country was recording about 1,300 Covid hospitalisations each day and there were more than 11,000 patients in hospital with the disease.
Department of Health data showed 24,979 cases were recorded in England and 2,012 were registered in Scotland, while 4,303 people tested positive in Wales and 1,028 were confirmed in Northern Ireland.
The most recent rise in infections was recorded on October 23, when 52,009 positive cases were reported.
Some 9.3million positive tests have been registered across the UK since the pandemic began.
But the real infection number is many millions higher, due to the limited testing capacity at the start of the crisis and not everyone who catches the virus coming forward for a test.
Meanwhile, a further 57 people died within 28 days of testing positive for the virus, compared to 40 last Monday.
Hospitalisation data, published last week, shows 1,054 infected people sought NHS care on November 2, a drop of 3.2 per cent on one week earlier.
Some 25,840 first doses and 14,610 second doses were administered across the UK, meaning 50.2million over-12s (87.4 per cent) have had at least one injection and 45.8million (79.7 per cent) fully immunised.
And 209,885 people came forward for their booster jab, bringing the total to 10.3million people. The top-up injections, along with first jabs to 12 to 15-year-olds, are a key part of the Government’s Plan A to bring down infection levels this winter.
It comes after Ms Pritchard suggested today there were ’14 times’ more coronavirus patients in hospital now compared to ‘this time last year’.
NHS England was later forced to clarify that Ms Pritchard was referring to statistics from the start of September, when Covid hospital rates were in fact higher than the same time last year.
Professor Francois Balloux, director of the University College London Genetics Institute, described Ms Pritchard’s claim as ‘nonsense’ and criticised news organisations for not challenging it.
Other researchers warned that the NHS chief executive had ‘abused’ the figures while political commentators said it was either the result of ‘incompetence or mendacity’.
Paul Mainwood, an Oxford University-educated physicist who challenged Ms Pritchard’s claim, tweeted to his 8,000 followers: ‘For those who have no idea what I’m on about. The Chief Executive of NHS England abusing statistics…’
Speaking to Sky News about the current NHS pressure, Ms Pritchard said: ‘We have had 14 times the number of people in hospital with Covid than we saw this time last year.
‘We also had a record number of A&E attendance and a record number of 999 calls. As we look into winter, I think we’re very clear this is going to be a difficult winter.
‘And the things we encourage people to do is anything they can do to protect themselves, so that’s the Covid vaccine, it’s the flu vaccination in particular.’
NHS England claimed that the figures quoted by Ms Pritchard were in reference to August, and weren’t meant to reflect the current situation.
During a round of interviews this morning, Amanda Pritchard suggested that there were ’14 times’ more coronavirus patients in hospital now compared to ‘this time last year’. Yet latest data from the Government’s dashboard shows there were 800 average daily Covid admissions on November 3, compared to almost 1,300 at the same point last year
There were 7,000 inpatients in England on Friday compared to more than 11,000 patients in hospital with the disease on November 5 2020
But the Government’s own Covid dashboard is based on hospital data provided by NHS England and goes up to November 5, slightly behind real time due to a recording lag.
Christopher Snowdon, from the rightwing think-tank the Institute of Economic Affairs, said in a blog post: ‘The idea that NHS England does not have access to figures that are updated every day on the dashboard is preposterous.’
Assessing the true pressure of Covid on the NHS has been made difficult because medics argue that other pandemic factors — like social distancing and isolation rules — have a knock-on effect on their ability to treat non-Covid patients.
They are also under additional pressures due to the huge backlog that has amassed during the pandemic.
But Boris Johnson has resisted calls from senior NHS officials to activate the country’s winter ‘Plan B’, which would see the return of compulsory masks and working from home, as well as vaccine passports.
Defending the decision to hold off during a visit to a hospital in Northumberland today, Mr Johnson said he is often presented with ‘different scientific advice and different scientists say different things’.
The Prime Minister added: ‘We study the data every day, we have reviews with NHS chiefs every day.
‘The key thing you want to do is to reduce those pressures, which are building, on the A&Es, on beds, by encouraging people, particularly the over-50s, to come forward and get your booster jab.’
Discussing the reason for his visit, Mr Johnson said: ‘I’m here to look at what we’re doing to encourage people to get their booster jabs and that is the single most important thing that the Government can do at the present time.
‘Unfortunately, what you’ve got at the moment is a situation in which the waning of the original two jabs is starting to see too many elderly people getting into hospital.
‘Sadly, the jabs do wane. We’ve done 10million booster jabs already and it’s a very effective thing.
‘It’s a wonderful thing, people get 95 per cent more protection, so I’m encouraging everybody today to go online if you’ve gone over five months, you can go online and book.’
From today, eligible Britons can book their booster jabs from five months after their second dose, so they can have an appointment at the six-month point.
Experts have said this is the ‘sweet spot’ for increasing immunity against the virus, as this is when protection from the jabs wanes.
Sajid Javid, the Health Secretary, angered NHS bosses last month when he claimed that the current pressure on the health service was not ‘unsustainable’.
Neither the Government nor health chiefs have put a threshold on the number of admissions or inpatients that the NHS could handle this winter.
But Ms Pritchard herself admitted last month to MPs that the health service has never been overwhelmed during the pandemic, even in the depths of winter last year at the peak of the second wave.
The Government’s scientific advisory panel SAGE also released uncharacteristically optimistic modelling which suggested cases will drop naturally in winter due to growing immunity.
Across the UK, daily Covid cases are already in steep decline despite schools returning from half-term at the start of the month.
In all but one day, infections have seen a week-on-week fall every day since October 23 and there are 35,000 on average now compared to around 45,000 in mid-October.
Professor Jim Naismith, director of the Rosalind Franklin Institute at the University of Oxford, joined a chorus of independent scientists in claiming that Britain’s third wave has already peaked.
He said he expects hospitalisations and deaths — both of which are lagging indicators — to follow in the coming weeks.
Professor Naismith told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘In terms of cases we certainly appear now to be going down quite quickly and that’s certainly what we would hope.
Ms Pritchard (left) made the comments as she urged people to come forward for their booster vaccines (progress, shown right) and warned that the health service was under ‘very real pressure’
‘The number of hospital admissions is still high, over a 1,000 a day, and the number of deaths is tragically still quite high with just over a 1,000 a week.’
But he added: ‘Of course, as cases fall we would expect the other two things to fall in time.’
Dr Mike Tildesley, a member of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Modelling group advising ministers on the virus — an influential sub-committee of SAGE, also struck a positive tone.
While stating the UK was ‘not out of the woods yet’ when it came to Covid, he added the country was a long way from facing the prospect of another winter lockdown.
He told Sky News: ‘I think we’re a long way away from thinking in those terms.
‘I think that clearly there is a situation that if the NHS is under severe pressure, if the number of deaths sadly starts to increase, then of course, obviously, there may be discussions around whether more restrictions need to come in.’
Leading experts have attributed Britain’s falling Covid cases to a rise in immunity trigged by a combination of the booster vaccine campaign, and the back-to-school wave of infection which triggered the latest wave.
Dr Tildesley added the prospect of a winter lockdown is dependent of how effective the rollout of the Covid vaccine booster programme is, and urged all eligible persons to get their jabs.
‘I would hope that, with a very successful vaccination campaign, the idea of a winter lockdown is a long way away,’ he said.
‘But it is certainly true that if we don’t get good immunity across the population, there may need to be perhaps further measures taken. So it’s really important that we encourage people to come forward when eligible to take those booster jabs.’
Professor Naismith also highlighted the importance of Covid booster jabs, adding he was eagerly awaiting getting his own. ‘I’m certainly looking forward to taking mine the first day I can,’ he said.