England’s Covid wave shrunk by another 14% last week, mass-testing survey reveals

England’s Covid cases last week fell to their lowest level since Omicron became dominant, according to the country’s most trusted infection survey.

An Office for National Statistics (ONS) report estimated there were 2.1million people infected on any given day during the week ending February 19, down 14 per cent on the previous estimate of 2.4million. It means one in 25 people were thought to be carrying the virus.

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It was the lowest estimate produced by the gold-standard survey since the week beginning December 17, when the ultra-transmissible variant first became dominant in England.

The ONS report is considered the most trustworthy record of infections in Britain because it uses random testing of hundreds of thousands of people per week, rather than relying on people coming forward for testing.

Despite the consistent falls in cases in England, the survey showed infections started to rise in Scotland, where one in 20 had the virus daily.

Cases increased by 10 per cent to 240,700 every day in the week ending February 20 in the country, the ONS estimated.

Statisticians said the rise ‘appears to have been driven by the Omicron BA.2 variant’, which is even more transmissible than its original parent strain.

The rise may explain Nicola Sturgeon’s more cautious approach to easing measures north of the border, with the country’s First Minister insisting free mass testing will continue despite England ditching the scheme in April.

Cases, deaths and hospitalisations have been falling the UK for weeks thanks to the effect of boosters and Omicron’s lower severity, prompting Boris Johnson to effectively call time on costly Government interventions — including mass swabbing — in England earlier this week.

Office for National Statistics (ONS) statisticians estimated there were 2.1million infections on any given day in England in the week up to February 19, down 14 per cent on the 2.4million per day the week before

Office for National Statistics (ONS) statisticians estimated there were 2.1million infections on any given day in England in the week up to February 19, down 14 per cent on the 2.4million per day the week before

Changes to infection levels in Wales and Northern Ireland over the week were 'uncertain', statisticians said, although both counties saw clear falls over the last two weeks. Infections started to rise in Scotland, where one in 20 had the virus daily

Changes to infection levels in Wales and Northern Ireland over the week were ‘uncertain’, statisticians said, although both counties saw clear falls over the last two weeks. Infections started to rise in Scotland, where one in 20 had the virus daily

High street pricing war for lateral flows begins

A high street pricing war over lateral flow tests broke out today as Superdrug revealed it will undercut rival chain Boots by offering Covid swabs for just £1.99 each.

Superdrug pledged to sell individual tests for 51p less than Boots, which yesterday became the first pharmacy to unveil its pricing strategy ahead of No10’s move to ditch free swabbing in April.

People who are not vulnerable to the virus and wish to continue testing will have to purchase the rapid kits from supermarkets, high street pharmacies and potentially even petrol stations on the first day of that month.

Superdrug said it would offer the individual swabs at a lower price than its competitor and will also sell multiple tests at a discounted price, with packs of five costing £9.79. It means the tests will be 18 per cent cheaper than Boots, which will eventually charge £12 for a pack of five or £2.50 per individual swab.

And Superdrug confirmed it would start offering swabs at its price in the coming days, significantly earlier than Boots, which started selling them online £6 each today.

The ONS survey found infections fell in every region of England during the week, except for the South East where the trend is ‘uncertain’.

Changes to infection levels in Wales and Northern Ireland over the week were also unclear, statisticians said, although both counties saw clear falls over the last two weeks.

Around one in 30 people had the virus in Wales during the week — the lowest of the four nations — while Northern Ireland had the highest prevalence, with one in 14 people testing positive.

In England, the proportion of people testing positive varied across age groups, with the highest being for children aged two to 11 at 4.84 per cent.

The most vulnerable over-70 age group continued to see the lowest prevalence at 2.08 per cent, the ONS estimated.

Esther Sutherland, head of strategic development for the ONS Covid-19 Infection Survey, said: ‘The number of people testing positive in the ONS survey has decreased in all regions of England, apart from the South East where the trend is uncertain.

‘While our numbers indicate a decrease in infections in Northern Ireland and Wales, the trend is uncertain in the most recent week.

‘Only in Scotland have we detected a rise in infections. That appears to have been driven by the Omicron BA.2 variant, the presence of which has also increased in the rest of the UK.’

Falls in infections, deaths and hospitalisations prompted Mr Johnson to announce his full ‘living with Covid’ timetable on Monday, including the axing of the self-isolation law in England from tomorrow.

Masks will no longer be compulsory on Tubes and buses in London as well, but people in the capital are still being ‘strongly recommended’ to continue covering up out of respect for fellow passengers.

Transport for London said it will no longer be a ‘condition of carriage’ to wear masks on its services but customers and staff will be ‘strongly recommended’ to wear face coverings regardless, in line with advice to passengers using national rail services.

TfL is also urging the use of face coverings in taxis and private hire vehicles by both drivers and passengers.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan has told people to keep wearing masks out of ‘consideration’, calling face coverings a ‘simple, effective measure that give Londoners confidence to travel’.

Covid cases in the UK have been tumbling for three weeks, official data showed yesterday as infections and hospital admissions dropped by another tenth

Covid cases in the UK have been tumbling for three weeks, official data showed yesterday as infections and hospital admissions dropped by another tenth

Boris Johnson hailed a new post-Covid era as he declared that self-isolation laws are being axed from tomorrow and free tests will go from April

Boris Johnson hailed a new post-Covid era as he declared that self-isolation laws are being axed from tomorrow and free tests will go from April

Nicola Sturgeon yesterday unveiled her plan for a ‘sustainable return to a normal way of life’ in Scotland as she promised to axe remaining coronavirus rules amid a furious row with Boris Johnson over scrapping free Covid tests.

The First Minister said the use of Covid certificates will end from Monday February 28 and the legal requirement to wear a face mask in certain indoor settings will be converted to guidance from March 21.

But she said access to free tests will continue ‘from now until further notice’ despite Mr Johnson committing to axing them in England from April 1.

The Scottish government will publish a detailed document in March setting out how it will gradually transition away from mass free testing in a ‘careful and phased manner’.

That raises the prospect of people in Scotland still being able to access free tests when people in England will have to pay for them.

However, it is currently unclear how Mrs Sturgeon would fund continued access to free tests, with Downing Street stressing it will not be providing any extra funding given the provision is ending in England.

The SNP is calling on the Treasury to provide more money but Chancellor Rishi Sunak is not expected to budge on the issue.

That means Mrs Sturgeon would likely have to cut spending in another area if she wants to continue to provide free tests beyond Mr Johnson’s April 1 cut-off date.

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