As of 5pm yesterday, of those hospitalised in the UK, we have lost another 684 people to COVID-19. We now sadly have a total of 3,605 losses of life.
Total cases are: England 31,797, Scotland 3,001, Wales 2,466 and Northern Ireland 904. Already (many more than) 135 of the UK's positive testing cases have recovered.
Rep. Of Ireland have 4,273 cases and 120 losses of life.
There have now been 1,074,290 reported cases worldwide. The number of people who have lost their lives worldwide to COVID-19 is now 56,989. Already 226,062 people have recovered.
Boris is still ill with a temperature (he doesn't look well), so it was over to Matt Hancock to lead the briefing.
In the last 24 hours, 2 nurses and 2 health care assistants have lost their lives to COVID-19.
We currently have over 2,000 empty critical care beds and haven't yet had to use the NHS Nightingale Hospitals (I am genuinely impressed with this, it's a really good thing. I expected we would need them this week).
It looks like a gorgeous weekend, but we absolutely cannot afford to relax the social distancing right now, it WILL cost lives. We are instructed to STAY HOME.
Ruth May, Chief Nursing Officer for England talked about the 'team' who have come together to all work for the NHS (thank you to all of you). She's not confident at speeches, but she's actually very sincere, genuinely thankful and, like most of us, a bit scared.
Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, Deputy Chief Medical Officer told us that we are staying home, and thanked us for that, and stressed we have to keep staying home.
We are following Italy and France's trajectories, almost on a par with the USA.
We expect to reach the peak of our epidemic around 14th April, we have a way to go yet.
We have looked into Anosmia (loss of sense of smell and taste) as a symptom, but have decided that alone it doesn't offer diagnosis, so isn't helpful. Much more helpfully Matt Hancock commented that he'd had this symptom and his senses have now returned.
We have ordered 17.5m antibody tests (Did I have it? tests, suitable from 4 weeks after you are ill) but they still haven't yet been through final UK quality controls.
There were questions about masks, and the answers were that 'they are not recommended for the general public'. If you are in a position to stay home and practise physical distancing when you are out, it offers you no real advantage.
PPE is being delivered to social care settings, and the army will be involved in the logistics of that.
More temporary hospital sites have been announced, Bristol (1000 beds) and Harrogate (500 beds).









