Britain has announced another 616 coronavirus victims today, taking the total number of fatalities in the UK to 18,783.
Another 4,583 people have tested positive for the virus in the past 24 hours, meaning 138,078 have now been officially diagnosed. The number of positive tests has remained stable this week and appears to be plateauing.
NHS England confirmed a further 514 people have died with COVID-19 and another 102 deaths were announced across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The Government had hoped to keep the number of victims to 20,000 or lower but recent trends suggest the UK will hit that by Sunday counting hospital deaths alone.
And data is increasingly showing huge numbers of people are dying in care homes but, in Britain, not being counted until a fortnight later. World Health Organization research has found half of all COVID-19 deaths are happening in nursing homes, signalling the UK’s death toll is set to surge when backdated data catches up.
Britain’s update comes as rifts are emerging in Government over how the UK will start to move out of its lockdown state when the coronavirus infection rate falls.
Conservative MPs have warned the Government it must trust the public and spell out how and when the nationwide shutdown will start to ease off.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who gives her daily briefings hours before Downing Street, today said she does not expect normality would return this year.
She indicated she was willing to ease restrictions without Whitehall’s approval but said vulnerable people would continue to be shielded and large gatherings of people would not be allowed ‘for some months to come’.
Testing will be key to moving forward from the epidemic, experts say, and the Department of Health today at last announced it will start ongoing population testing as well as backward-looking antibody tests, known as ‘have you had it’ tests.
However, with only a week to go until it must hit its 100,000-a-day target, Matt Hancock’s Department still has yet to manage more than 24,000 in a day.
NHS England today announced that the 514 patients who had died in its hospitals were aged between 31 and 100 years old.
Sixteen of them, the youngest of whom was 37, had no other health problems before they caught the coronavirus.
The biggest proportion of the deaths announced today – 216 of them – happened on Tuesday, April 21, while 111 happened yesterday and 75 on Monday.
April 8 remains the deadliest day of the outbreak so far and is believed to have been the peak. NHS England now says 831 people died in its hospitals on that date.
April 10, meanwhile, was the day on which the Department of Health announced the most deaths (980).
This was the biggest single-day announcement of hospital deaths of any country in Europe since the pandemic began.
Today’s figure is 37 per cent lower and represents the next step in what increasingly seems to be a downward trend.
Professor Jim Naismith, a biologist at the University of Oxford, said: ‘The reduction in deaths and drop in the pressure upon hospitals are a welcome respite.
‘As deaths continue falling, we need to remember this is only the first round. When all the deaths are counted, this first wave of COVID-19 will have brought tragedy to families across the UK.
‘We owe it to those families to learn the right lessons from this awful experience and do better.’
The Government last week said the current lockdown, in which people are not allowed to leave their homes except for shopping, exercise and medical appointments, will continue at least into early May.
But some ministers are losing patience and urging Whitehall to give reassurances about when the public might be able to return to work.
They said it is ‘silly’ for the Government not to be totally frank with the public given how well most of the population has stuck to social distancing measures.
They stressed ‘there has got to be an economy to go back to’ as they sounded a warning which will be heard loud and clear in Downing Street.
Treasurer of the Government’s 1922 Committee, Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, today suggested a comprehensive plan must be set out within the next month or many businesses ‘are likely to cease trading’.
However, in a sign tensions are likely to rise, Dominic Raab said last night it would be weeks before ministers even think about putting forward an exit strategy.
Chief medical officer, Professor Chris Whitty, admitted some restrictions are likely to be in place for the ‘next calendar year’.
There have been signs in recent days that some people are beginning to tire of the curbs on daily life with photographs showing more people on the UK’s roads and in the nation’s parks.
It came as it emerged the Government is pressing ahead with plans to set up a 15,000 strong contact-tracing army alongside its plans for community testing.
Two testing schemes were announced today which will, at last, attempt to draw up a picture of the UK’s outbreak as a whole, not just in hospitals.
People in one thousand households will have blood taken each month to try and keep track of what proportion of the population has immunity to the virus – antibody tests.
And a group of up between 25,000 and 300,000 people will have regular swab tests for the next year to see whether and when they get infected, which should give an idea of the virus’s spread.
Alongside this, a team of thousands of trained ‘contact tracers’ will work to track down people who have been exposed to the virus by people who test positive.
Together, the testing and contact tracing are intended to form a system which aims to watch and control future outbreaks.
By catching infected patients early and isolating them and their families and friends, authorities may be able to stop a nationwide epidemic like the one happening now.
The technique has been used with great success in South Korea which, with the exception of a sudden outbreak of cases stemming from a church in one region, has kept the numbers of infections and deaths low and not needed to go into lockdown.
Professor Naismith, indicating that he expects more COVID-19 outbreaks in the future, said: ‘A large number of tests on their own will not solve the problem; what is needed is a holistic approach seen in South Korea.
‘Germany, like the UK, has controlled the virus by locking down. I believe that the superior testing regime in Germany may have allowed better tracking of the epidemic at the start.
‘Thus Germany may have locked down earlier in the disease cycle and thereby reduced their death toll. Even a few days, when the virus is rapidly spreading, can have large consequences.
‘The UK will face any future rounds with an improved testing infrastructure, a much better understanding of the dynamics of the pandemic and insights into how effective various social measures have been.
‘We are seeing positive hints from passive immune therapy trials that if proven could reduce the number of deaths in a future wave.
‘There are unprecedented efforts to develop effective drugs that I feel sure will bear fruit. Vaccine trials are now underway and we hope they will be successful.
‘Until a vaccine rids us of this disease however, all our efforts should be laser focussed on actions we can take now in the UK to reduce the death toll in any subsequent wave.’