UK Covid cases rise by 36% in a week to 24,885 but deaths fall by a fifth to 18

UK Covid cases rise by 36% in a week to 24,885 but deaths fall by a fifth to 18
UK Covid cases rise by 36% in a week to 24,885 but deaths fall by a fifth to 18

Britain's daily Covid cases surged 36 per cent in one week - but the country's death toll has plummeted by a fifth as vaccinations keep hospitalisations low.

A further 24,885 people tested positive for coronavirus today, up from 18,270 last Saturday and the sixth day in a row the daily figure has surged above 20,000.

But the 18 deaths recorded today mark a drop of 21.7 per cent on the 23 recorded on this day last week.

It is a positive sign that jabs are keeping the number of serious cases small.

The latest data shows there were 358 people admitted to hospital with the virus on June 29 - up 54 per cent on the last week. 

Despite the rise, current levels are a fraction of the number of people in hospital the last time infections were this high at the end of the second wave. 

Meanwhile, fully-vaccinated Britons are expected to within weeks be free to live as normal after coming into contact with a coronavirus sufferer.

NHS Covid app means hospitality staff walking around busy venues are particularly likely to receive notifications

NHS Covid app means hospitality staff walking around busy venues are particularly likely to receive notifications

Proposals to allow those with both jabs to carry on as normal without the need to self-isolate or take daily tests are 'under consideration, the Government has confirmed, amid fears the current use of the NHS Covid-19 app could 'cripple' Britain.

Officials have admitted the suggestion carries with it a risk that unvaccinated people may ignore the rules, The Times reported. 

Infections are predicted to increase by 26 per cent if the restrictions are lifted but the Government is expected to move ahead with the plans to avoid further disruption to businesses, schools and public services.

It comes after NHS staff blasted the Government's track and trace system because a fifth of double-jabbed workers, and also millions of Britons, could be asked to self-isolate.

A meeting of the Covid operations committee on Monday is expected to see ministers sign off the plan to 'advise' but not require fully vaccination people to take daily tests if they are named as a contact to a coronavirus sufferer.

Cabinet minister hope the plan will allow them to better support those who test positive, following complaints the rules are not currently being followed because of an absence of financial support. 

Nearly two million people a week could be forced to self- isolate by the end of the month unless ministers reform the rules

Nearly two million people a week could be forced to self- isolate by the end of the month unless ministers reform the rules

Dr Bharat Pankhania, a senior clinical lecturer in communicable diseases at the University of Exeter's medical school, said he thought it was 'perfectly OK' for people who had received two doses of a coronavirus vaccine to be exempt from quarantine measures.

Dr Pankhania told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'The gold standard would be to be cautious even if you have been immunised twice - in other words, fully immunised.

'However, as a measured action going forward I think it is OK and my reasons are as follows: an immunised person is less infectious and furthermore the testing of people who are in quarantine isolating is pretty inaccurate, so balancing both, I think it is perfectly OK.'

Ministers want to introduce proposals to allow those with both jabs to carry on as normal without the need to self-isolate or take daily tests as soon as next month. Pictured, Boris Johnson

Ministers want to introduce proposals to allow those with both jabs to carry on as normal without the need to

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