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Covid cases on the up in the UK sparking new wave fears

Rates are currently highest among secondary school-age children

Ian Jones
Friday 17 February 2023 12:47 EST
UK approves first Covid-19 booster vaccine to target two variants

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Covid-19 levels are rising in most parts of the UK, in the latest sign a new wave of the virus is under way.

Infections have increased in England, Wales and Scotland, though Northern Ireland is continuing to see a fall.

Most age groups in England have seen a jump in prevalence of Covid, with rates highest among secondary school-age children.

The number of hospital patients in England who have tested positive is also continuing to rise.

A total of 1.2 million people in private households in the UK were likely to have Covid-19 in the week to 7 February, up 20 per cent from 1 million the previous week, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

It is the second week in a row the UK-wide total has increased and comes after a steady drop in levels throughout January.

A surge in the virus in the run-up to Christmas saw infections peak at 3 million at the end of December, though this was well below the figures seen in previous waves, including in spring 2022 when the weekly total climbed to a record 4.9 million.

This week's data show infections have increased in all UK countries, except Northern Ireland where they have continued to decrease

Kara Steel, ONS senior statistician

Around one in 55 people in England is estimated to have the virus, up from one in 65 the previous week.

The virus is least prevalent in Northern Ireland, at one in 80 people – the lowest estimate for the nation since September 2022.

For Scotland, the estimate is one in 55, while for Wales it is one in 65.

Kara Steel, ONS senior statistician, said: “This week’s data show infections have increased in all UK countries, except Northern Ireland where they have continued to decrease.

“Positivity increased across most age groups in England and in all English regions except the North East and the South West, where the trend was uncertain.”

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