COVID-19 Coronavirus UK and World News weekend update 18/19 July 2020.
The UK added 726 cases today and now has reported a total of 294,792 positive cases of COVID-19. We completed 140,393 tests yesterday.
1,690 people were in hospital on Thursday 16th, down from 2,172 a week before. On Friday 17th, 143 patients were using a ventilator.
In the 24 hours up until 5pm yesterday, we reported the loss of another 27 people who have tested positive to COVID-19. We now very sadly have a total of 45,300 official losses of life in all settings.
England 253,585 / 40,706
Northern Ireland 5,834 / 556
Scotland 18,445 / 2,491
Wales 16,928 / 1,547
Rep. Of Ireland 25,750 (+10) cases and 1,753 losses of life.
There have now been a total of 14,530,599 reported cases worldwide. The number of people who have officially lost their lives worldwide to COVID-19 is 606,762. Already 8,670,395 people have recovered.
Over the two days Friday and Saturday, almost 500,000 new cases of Covid-19 were reported to the World Health Organisation. Over those 2 days, the United States of America reported more than 138,000 new cases of COVID.
Since the beginning of the outbreak, Europe has in total reported over 3m cases and The Americas (North and South) over 7m.
England's Test And Trace continues to get a proper slating. Professor Dominic Harrison, the public health director of Blackburn with Darwen borough council (which has a significant outbreak) investigated, and found Track And Trace in the North West was so bad, it's actually hampering efforts to contain the outbreak. Andy Burnham, Manchester Mayor, put it incredibly succinctly:
"The local public health teams identify 99% of the contacts of those they test. But they don’t get data from those tested by Deloitte. And Serco have managed only 59000 contacts in 6 weeks ie <1 contact per tracer per fortnight. A £10 billion shambles."









