Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Covid infections at lowest for nearly a year

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TOTAL Covid-19 infections in the UK have dropped to their lowest level for nearly a year.

However, the trend in some parts of the country is uncertain, with increased numbers in Scotland.

Some 881,200 people in private households are estimated to have had coronaviru­s in the week to September 5, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

This is down 7% on the previous week and is the lowest UK-wide total since the week to September 25 2021, when the number stood at 837,800. The overall number of infections has been on a downwards path since early July, when the total hit 3.8 million at the peak of the wave caused by the Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 subvariant­s of the virus.

The 7% drop in the latest figures is the smallest week-on-week percentage fall since the current decline began, however. There are also contrastin­g trends among UK nations and regions.

In England, the percentage of people testing positive for coronaviru­s in the week to September 5 was 705,800, or around one in 75 – down from 770,800, or one in 70, in the seven days to August 28.

But in Scotland, 113,500 people were likely to have tested positive for Covid-19 in the latest week, or one in 45 – up from 104,400, or one in 50. Trends in both Wales and Northern Ireland were described by the ONS as “uncertain”.

The latest estimate for infections in Wales is 28,200 people, or one in 110, compared with 31,500 in the previous week, or one in 95. Infections are estimated to have fallen in London and south-east England, while in all other regions the trend is uncertain.

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