Coronavirus UK: Death toll hits 36,914 with 121 new fatalities

By | May 25, 2020

Britain announces 121 Covid-19 daily deaths – taking official number of fatalities to 36,914

  • It marks the lowest Monday Covid-19 death toll since lockdown was enforced on March 23 – 74 deaths
  • For comparison, 160 coronavirus deaths were announced last Monday and 118 were recorded yesterday 
  • Death numbers given on Sundays and Mondays are usually smaller due to a delay in processing fatalities
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

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Britain today announced 121 more coronavirus deaths across all settings, taking the official death toll to almost 37,000 as sun-worshippers descended on parks and beaches to enjoy the 79F heatwave.

It marks the lowest Monday death toll since the UK’s draconian lockdown was enforced on March 23 (74 deaths). For comparison, 160 fatalities were announced last Monday and 118 were recorded yesterday.  

But officials warn that death numbers released on Sundays and Mondays are usually significantly smaller due to a delay in processing fatalities over the weekend. 

Department of Health chiefs also announced 1,625 more Covid-19 cases today, the first time the UK has recorded fewer than 2,000 positive tests in the space of 24 hours in almost nine weeks. 

In another dramatic day in Britain’s coronavirus crisis, Dominic Cummings refused to apologise for driving 260 miles to Durham during the coronavirus lockdown.

Boris Johnson’s chief aide claimed he had always behaved reasonably and legally amid growing calls for the Prime Minister’s top adviser and Vote Leave maverick to be sacked.

Mr Cummings faced accusations of ‘double standards’, with the nation having been told to stay at home – but he told an unprecedented press conference in the Number 10 Rose Garden: ‘I don’t regret what I did.’

In other developments to Britain’s coronavirus crisis today: 

  • Britons descended on parks and beaches amid an expected 79F heatwave as they declared, ‘If Dominic Cummings can break the rules, we can too’;
  • An NHS hospital in the Somerset seaside hotspot of Weston-super-Mare was forced to stop taking new patients due to a high number of coronavirus cases; 
  • Newsreader Simon McCoy slammed his BBC colleague Gary Lineker for abusing his position after the Match of the Day host accused the Prime Minister of lying;
  • Schools face a long journey before they are able to return to normal, Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said as he insisted classes must restart on June 1.

CUMMINGS REFUSES TO APOLOGISE FOR DRIVING TO DURHAM DURING CORONAVIRUS LOCKDOWN 

Dominic Cummings today refused to apologise for driving 260 miles to Durham during the coronavirus lockdown as he claimed he had always behaved ‘reasonably and legally’ amid growing calls for the PM’s top aide to be sacked.

Mr Cummings said his decision to travel to the city to stay in a cottage on his parents’ land was the result of a ‘very complicated, tricky situation’ as he admitted he had not sought Boris Johnson’s permission to make the journey at the end of March.

The Vote Leave maverick has faced accusations of ‘double standards’, with the nation having been told to stay at home, but he told an unprecedented press conference in the Number 10 Rose Garden: ‘I don’t regret what I did… I think what I did was reasonable in the circumstances.’

Asked directly if he had offered to quit or had even considered it, he added: ‘No I have not offered to resign, no I have not considered it.’ 

Mr Cummings conceded that ‘reasonable people may well disagree’ with his chosen course of action but he was resolute in his belief that he had acted in an appropriate manner and had not broken the rules.

He insisted ‘I don’t think there is one rule for me and one rule for other people’ and blamed public anger at media reports ‘that have not been true’.

The usually scruffy adviser was wearing an open collared shirt as he confirmed that he had travelled to the town of Barnard Castle on April 12 after the end of his period in self-isolation with coronavirus.

He insisted he and his family had not walked around the town 30 miles from Durham and had only ventured 15 metres from the car to the river bank. He said the purpose of the journey was to see if he was fit enough to make the drive back to London.

He also said that he and his family had walked around a woods during their stay in Durham but that they were within his parents’ private property and that they had not come into contact with anyone else.

Meanwhile, he claimed he did not stop for fuel on the way up to Durham but he had stopped once on the way back.

He said: ‘Yesterday I gave a full account to the Prime Minister of my actions between March 27 and April 14, what I thought and did.

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The Department of Health’s daily death toll means the rolling seven-day average of victims has dropped to just 303 – the lowest since March 31 (274) and less than a third of the peak on April 14 (943). 

It takes the overall official number of victims to 36,914 – but the true number is thousands higher because it only takes into account laboratory-confirmed cases, not the suspected deaths in other settings.   

Of the 121 new deaths, 76 occurred in hospitals – most of which were in England. The remainder of the newly recorded Covid-19 fatalities happened in other settings, such as care homes. 

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England recorded 104 deaths, followed by nine in Scotland, seven in Wales and one in Northern Ireland – tallies that do not match up with the individual counts recorded by each of the home nations.

For instance, Scotland’s own health chiefs today announced three new deaths but yesterday recorded seven. Northern Ireland had the same issue, recording eight new fatalities today but only one yesterday. 

The issue is only thought to occur with Scotland and Northern Ireland because of a difference in how the data is collected. Wales announced seven new deaths today and yesterday.

NHS England figures also do not match the individual tally collated by the Department of Health for England (104) because the official toll includes deaths across all settings, not just in hospitals.

And the two use different measures for hospital deaths, with the DH relying on data from Public Health England, which uses several sources to provide an update every afternoon.

The figures published today by NHS England confirm that April 8 was still the peak of the crisis, with 891 hospital deaths recorded – up from the 59 that were announced today by NHS England. 

Of the 59 new deaths recorded in England’s hospitals, 47 occurred over the weekend. Five took place on Friday, while the remaining seven victims succumbed to the disease between May 16 and 21. 

It comes as Dominic Cummings will this afternoon make a public statement to directly address claims he broke lockdown rules by travelling to Durham, Downing Street confirmed. 

Mr Cummings is expected to take questions about his conduct which has plunged the government into a state of crisis and has prompted calls for a formal investigation. 

The intervention came after one of the government’s scientific advisers warned the ‘debacle’ over the lockdown journey had ‘fatally undermined’ the nation’s fight against coronavirus.

Professor Stephen Reicher, who is a member of the Government’s advisory group on behavioural science which feeds into SAGE, said the result of ‘undermining adherence to the rules’ will be that ‘more people are going to die’. 

Mr Johnson is facing a furious backlash from ministers, Tory MPs and even bishops after he yesterday attempted to mount an extraordinary defence of Mr Cummings, staking his reputation on trying to protect his aide. 

At a dramatic Downing Street press conference last night, the PM claimed Mr Cummings had acted ‘responsibly, legally and with integrity’ while making a controversial 260-mile trip from London to Durham during lockdown.

Mr Johnson insisted Mr Cummings had ‘followed the instincts of every father’ by driving to his parents’ farm after his wife developed symptoms of coronavirus. The PM’s defence of his aide prompted fury among Britons. 

Sun-worshippers descended on parks and beaches today for the Bank Holiday amid an expected 79F heatwave, which could see parts of the country basked in temperatures hotter than Athens, Nice and Barcelona. 

Crowds formed outside the Serpentine in London’s Hyde Park, as beaches in Sussex, Essex and Dorset quickly filled up with visitors looking to enjoy the dry and sunny conditions forecast to last the whole day.

The packed beach in Bournemouth this afternoon. People in England are now allowed to travel for day trips but must stay at least six feet away from people who are not from their household, something that is difficult in such crowded areas

The packed beach in Bournemouth this afternoon. People in England are now allowed to travel for day trips but must stay at least six feet away from people who are not from their household, something that is difficult in such crowded areas 

Thousands of sunbathers and visitors flock to Durdle Door at Lulworth in Dorset this afternoon on a day of clear blue skies and scorching hot sunshine

Thousands of sunbathers and visitors flock to Durdle Door at Lulworth in Dorset this afternoon on a day of clear blue skies and scorching hot sunshine

Dominic Cummings: The acerbic ‘career psychopath’ and Brexit mastermind not afraid to speak his mind – or make enemies 

Few supposedly backroom political operators have found themselves in the limelight as often as Dominic Cummings, the quiet yet acerbic mastermind credited with winning the Brexit referendum.

Once just one of dozens of special advisors working for the Tories he leapt into the limelight by overseeing the Vote Leave operation which helped win the 2016 vote.

But it is the machinations in Downing Street during the 48-year-old’s 10 months working for Boris Johnson that has created a dramatis personae rarely seen in British politics.

Allies see him as a boot-tough, anti-establishment consigliere to the PM, on a mission to shake up politics and the civil service after years of stagnation.

Enemies – which he appears to make in droves – appear to regard him as a hardline Brexiteer puppet-master akin to a modern-day Rasputin.

Much of this image appears to have been happily built up by the ‘career psychopath’ – a moniker given to him by David Cameron.

His time in No10 has seen him clash widely as he cemented a power base that culminated this week in the Prime Minister refusing to sack him for breaking lockdown despite the clamour from the public, press and his own MPs.

He has turfed out long-serving ministers and staff to create a No10 wheel that has him at its hub.

More recently he has clashed with top civil servants including Cabinet Secretary Mark Sedwill in his quest to revolutionise Whitehall and was seen as the man responsible for ousting Sajid Javid as chancellor in February.

 

People in England are now allowed to travel for day trips but must stay at least six feet away from people who are not from their household, something that could be impossible in crowded areas.

In other developments today, an NHS hospital in the Somerset seaside hotspot of Weston-super-Mare was forced to stop taking new patients due to ‘a high number’ of coronavirus cases.

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Weston General Hospital dramatically announced this morning it could not take any more admissions, including into A&E.

Health chiefs do not know why the hospital has had an influx of Covid-19 cases, with bosses warning all hospitals have ‘frequent’ changes in admissions.

But questions were today asked over whether the blame may lie on crowds who have flocked to the town to enjoy the sun since lockdown was slightly eased.

Thousands of people travelled to the South West and other coastal areas as soon as the government allowed nationwide travel again on May 13.

Weston-super-Mare’s mayor even admitted ‘you can’t rule it out’, when questioned if scores of Britons on the beach were to blame for the surge in cases. 

It is not the first time hospitals have been overwhelmed amid the coronavirus crisis, which began to spiral out of control in mid-March.

One NHS hospital in London was forced to declare a ‘critical incident’ early on in the crisis, after running out of intensive care beds. 

Other hospitals in the capital have allegedly had to turn away coronavirus patients because they were running out of beds, according to staff.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson today admitted that schools face a ‘long journey’ before they are able to return to normal, and he insisted classes must restart on June 1 for the mental health of children.

He acknowledged there would be ‘initial nervousness’ from parents about releasing their children from the months’ long shutdown. But he said that on top of missing classes they were also missing ‘social interaction’ with their friends.

His emotional pitch to parents came after Boris Johnson has suggested non-essential shops could soon reopen and family ‘bubbles’ be extended in a further easing of lockdown measures this week.

Draconian measures put in place on March 23 to limit the spread of coronavirus were relaxed two weeks ago to allow households to meet one person from another in an outdoor space, so long as they remain two metres apart. 

NHS HOSPITAL IN WESTON-SUPER-MARE SHUTS A&E AND STOPS TAKING NEW PATIENTS 

Weston General Hospital in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, has stopped taking new patients due to 'a high number' already there with coronavirus

Weston General Hospital in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, has stopped taking new patients due to ‘a high number’ already there with coronavirus

An NHS hospital in the Somerset seaside hotspot of Weston-super-Mare was today forced to stop taking new patients due to ‘a high number’ of coronavirus cases.

Weston General Hospital dramatically announced this morning that it could not take any more admissions, including into A&E.

Health chiefs do not know why the hospital has had an influx of Covid-19 cases, with bosses warning all hospitals have ‘frequent’ changes in admissions.

But questions were today asked over whether the blame may lie on crowds who have flocked to the town to enjoy the sun since lockdown was slightly eased. 

Thousands of people travelled to the South West and other coastal areas as soon as the government allowed nationwide travel again on May 13.

Weston-super-Mare’s mayor even admitted ‘you can’t rule it out’, when questioned if scores of Britons on the beach were to blame for the surge in cases. 

Furious Brits warned VE day celebrations on the beach on May 8 were ‘coming home to roost’, and one warned a second wave ‘rolling’ into the South West. 

It is not the first time hospitals have been overwhelmed amid the coronavirus crisis, which began to spiral out of control in mid-March.

One NHS hospital in London was forced to declare a ‘critical incident’ early on in the crisis, after running out of intensive care beds. 

Other hospitals in the capital have allegedly had to turn away coronavirus patients because they were running out of beds, according to staff.

Britons were also permitted to partake in unlimited exercise, use outdoor sports courts and facilities and visit garden centres while pubs, restaurants and bars stay shut.

But the Prime Minister last night suggested measures could be eased again, after he claimed in the daily Downing Street news conference Britain was ‘in a position to move to Step two’ of his roadmap to recovery.

Mr Williamson repeated the Government’s mantra of creating a ‘protective bubble’ around returning pupils when he appeared on BBC Breakfast.

He added: ‘Without the benefit of going to school they are really missing out, not just educationally. I’m sure we have seen it with our own children, they have spent so much time away from children of their own age, having those elements of social interaction.’

There are almost 260,000 positive test results of COVID-19 so far. But there are bound to be millions more Britons who have had the virus but never been tested.

Doctors warned today spread of the virus in hospitals may be fuelled by high ‘false negative’ test results.

Three in 10 negative coronavirus tests may be wrong, The Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association (HCSA) has said, which means between two and three people who have Covid-19 may test negative. 

This is dangerous because it means the patients may go outside and spread the virus to others, under the belief they are free of the infection, and hospital staff may return to work thinking they are virus-free. 

The HCSA, which represents thousands of frontline medics, said there is a ‘shroud of secrecy’ over how accurate the swab tests are and called for an end to the ‘wall of silence’ on testing accuracy from Public Health England (PHE).

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PHE has never disclosed how accurate its antigen testing is, despite publishing public papers on the accuracy of antibody tests.

In a letter to Duncan Selbie, the chief executive of PHE, Dr Paul Donaldson, general secretary of the HCSA, expressed his ‘deep concern and frustration’ at the ‘systematic lack of information’ over the reliability its tests.

He said: ‘A wall of silence seems to have been erected around the issue, with only the occasional claim or hint emerging regarding the testing regime. 

‘Separately, statements by PHE officials and others place the incidence of false negatives somewhere between 20 and 30 per cent.

Beach-goers enjoy the sunshine as they sunbathe on the beach and play in the sea at a packed beach today in Southend, Essex

Beach-goers enjoy the sunshine as they sunbathe on the beach and play in the sea at a packed beach today in Southend, Essex

People sunbathing and exercising on Tooting Bec common in south London today - where temperatures hovered around 79F

People sunbathing and exercising on Tooting Bec common in south London today – where temperatures hovered around 79F

IT WILL BE A ‘LONG JOURNEY’ TO GET SCHOOLS BACK TO NORMAL, SAYS GAVIN WILLIAMSON 

Schools face a ‘long journey’ before they are able to return to normal, Gavin Williamson admitted today as he insisted classes must restart on June 1 for the mental health of children.

The Education Secretary acknowledged that there would be ‘initial nervousness’ from parents about releasing their children from the months’ long shutdown.

But he said that on top of missing classes they were also missing ‘social interaction’ with their friends. 

His emotional pitch to parents came after Boris Johnson has suggested non-essential shops could soon reopen and family ‘bubbles’ be extended in a further easing of lockdown measures this week. 

Mr Williamson repeated the Government’s mantra of creating a ‘protective bubble’ around returning pupils when he appeared on BBC Breakfast.

He added: ‘Without the benefit of going to school they are really missing out, not just educationally.

‘I’m sure we have seen it with our own children, they have spent so much time away from children of their own age, having those elements of social interaction.

He added: ‘I have seen it in my own children, how much they are missing out. We can’t be in a situation where we just go months and months where children are just going to be missing out on education.

‘Coronavirus could be with us a year or more. If we don’t get them back, how much they fall behind will be tragic and we have got to take these first cautious, tentative steps.’ 

Draconian measures put in place on March 23 to limit the spread of coronavirus were relaxed two weeks ago to allow households to meet one person from another in an outdoor space, so long as they remain two metres apart.

Britons were also permitted to partake in unlimited exercise, use outdoor sports courts and facilities and visit garden centres while pubs, restaurants and bars stay shut.

But the Prime Minister last night suggested measures could be eased again, after he claimed in the daily Downing Street news conference Britain was ‘in a position to move to Step 2’ of his roadmap to recovery.

‘If confirmed, this is a worryingly high rate that raises the prospect of many infected individuals, possibly without symptoms, being passed fit to return to healthcare settings where they will transmit Sars-CoV-2 to colleagues and patients. 

‘If the chance of false negative results is as high as reported then in our view, without repeat PCR testing to confirm a negative result, staff should not be told to return to a clinical setting where they would risk passing SARS-CoV-2 to vulnerable patients and fellow staff. 

‘This could become a particularly acute issue as the NHS plans to significantly increase its non-Covid work and wider lockdown measures are eased.’ 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned hospital acquired COVID-19 has caused an ‘epidemic’ of deaths during the pandemic. 

NHS bosses say up to a fifth of Covid-19 patients in several hospitals have contracted the disease while already being treated there for another illness. 

PHE uses polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, which are a form of antigen tests conducted to see if someone has the virus, SARS-CoV-2, at any given time. 

These viral RNA tests use samples taken from a suspected patient’s throat, mouth or nose with a swab.

The accuracy of viral RNA swabs depends almost entirely on the quality of sampling and when the sample is taken in the course of disease, which will vary greatly, experts say.

Research by the University of Bristol found between two per cent and 29 per cent of COVID-19 tests produced false negatives. 

And a review of five studies, by Public Health Madrid, found Covid-19 swabbing produced false negative results the first time round 29 per cent of the time. 

Experts say false negatives will be a result of incorrect swabbing because there will be variances in how medics – and those taking a test at home – do it.

The preferred way – and most accurate, doctors say – is for trained medics to take a nasopharyngeal swab because it collects the most concentrated sample.

But the test is so uncomfortable it’s been described like ‘being stabbed in the brain’. It can cause people to gag and suffer nosebleeds. 

Photos of drive through centres show healthcare workers opting for the less invasive option of a nose or throat sample.

Following the letter, Dr Nick Phin, PHE’s incident director, said: ‘The testing system is built on strong foundations using latest scientific evidence and advice. 

‘The different tests in use have been assessed as performing to manufacturers’ specifications.’


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