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Covid-19 in the UK: How many coronavirus cases are there in your area?

By The Visual and Data Journalism Team
BBC News

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There have been more than 4.3 million confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK and over 126,000 people have died, government figures show.

However, these figures include only people who have died within 28 days of testing positive for coronavirus.

More than 29 million people in the UK have now had their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

Find out how the pandemic has affected your area and how it compares with the national average:

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How many cases and deaths in your area?

Enter a full UK postcode or council name to find out





Data for the most recent days may be revised upwards as new test results are received


What do these charts show?
Cases are people who have tested positive for coronavirus. Public health bodies may occasionally revise their case numbers. Case rate by age only available for England. *The "average area" means the middle ranking council or local government district when ranked by cases per 100,000 people.
The case rate chart shows how many people have tested positive each day for every 100,000 people in that area. The dark blue line shows the average daily rate over the past seven days. This average helps to show whether cases are rising or falling. The case rate by age chart shows how many people have tested positive in each age group per 100,000 people. Steeper rises in older age groups are of more concern because older people are more likely to be badly affected by the virus and are more likely to need hospital care. The case rate by age shows a rate. This means the values for the two age groups cannot be added together to get the overall case rate in each area.
Source: UK public health bodies - updated weekdays.
Vaccines are data for first doses. England and Scotland data is by local authority, Wales is by health board area, Northern Ireland is national data. The percentages of people vaccinated is calculated using the most recent mid-year population estimates published by the Office for National Statistics. The actual size of the population in each area may differ and so the percentages are also estimates.
Source: NHS England, Public Health Wales, Public Health Scotland, gov.uk dashboard, Office for National statistics. England and Wales updated weekly. Scotland and Northern Ireland updated weekdays
Deaths are where COVID-19 was mentioned on the death certificate. The chart shows the number of deaths recorded each week per 100,000 people in that area. Covid deaths are in red, other deaths are in grey. The average is the monthly average of deaths in the last five years between 2014-2019. This average will continue to be used in 2021. Recording of deaths over Christmas and New Year was affected by the bank holidays - trends should be treated with caution.
Source: ONS, NRS and NISRA - data updated weekly.

If you can't see the look-up click here.

Cases have declined

The average number of new daily cases in the UK has fallen substantially in recent weeks, but now appears to be levelling off.

A further 4,715 confirmed cases across the UK were announced by the government on Saturday. This compares with 5,587 new cases reported a week ago.

Infection levels in secondary school-age children have risen slightly in England, according to the Office for National Statistics, which tests a random sample of adults and children in the community. But infections have fallen in older teenagers and young people, the ONS estimates.

Overall, the percentage of people testing positive has levelled off in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and risen in Scotland.

It is thought the infection rate was much higher than was evident from the reported number of cases during the first peak in spring last year. Testing capacity was too limited to detect the true number of daily cases.

The orange areas on the map below show the places currently seeing the highest number of cases per 100,000 people.

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Coronavirus across the UK

Tap or click to see how many cases per 100,000 in the latest week

Fewer than 10 10-24 25-49 50-99 100-199 200-399 400-999 1,000+

The nations of the UK are moving to the next stages of easing restrictions on everyday life.

From 29 March, people in England will be allowed to meet outside, either with one other household or within the "rule of six", including in private gardens.

Scotland's lockdown will start to be lifted from the beginning of April, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon says, with the "stay at home" rule becoming "stay local" and all children expected to resume school full time by 19 April.

In Wales, which moved to "stay local" advice last week, four people from two different households can meet up outdoors to socialise and non-essential retail will re-open from 12 April.

A phased return to school is under way in Northern Ireland, with all children expected to return by 12 April. Other measures will be reviewed at the end of March.

Vaccine rollout continues

More than 29 million people - or half of all UK adults - have now received a first dose of a vaccine and more than three million people have had a second.

Last Saturday saw the highest number of vaccinations given in a single day - more than 844,000.

The government has often described vaccine supplies as "lumpy" and the NHS has warned that there will be a "significant reduction in weekly supply" of vaccines in April.

In total, more than 25.2 million people in England have had one vaccine dose.

In Scotland, more than 2.3 million people have had their first dose, while the figure is more than 1.3 million in Wales and more than 719,000 in Northern Ireland.

People aged 50 and over are now being offered the vaccine and the government says it is on course to meet its target of offering a vaccine to everyone in the top nine priority groups by 15 April.

After that, the rest of the adult population will be vaccinated, with people prioritised by age.

All adults in the UK are expected to be offered their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine by the end of July.

Daily deaths falling

A further 58 deaths across the UK within 28 days of a positive test were reported on Saturday.

This compares with 96 deaths reported on Saturday last week.

Of the most recently reported deaths, 43 were in England, seven were in Wales, six were in Scotland and two were in Northern Ireland.

Rules were amended last summer to include deaths in the coronavirus total only if they occurred within 28 days of a positive test. Previously in England, all deaths after a positive test were included.

England has seen the majority of UK deaths from Covid-19. Using the 28-day cut-off, there have been more than 111,000.

Situation improving in hospitals

The most recent government figures show 4,560 people with coronavirus in hospital in the UK.

Numbers in mid-January reached almost double the highest point of the peak last spring, but have been falling since then.

London, the South East and the Midlands saw the highest numbers in recent weeks, but patient numbers are falling in all UK nations and regions now.

But everywhere saw more patients in hospital in the winter surge than during the first wave last spring.

Death toll could be higher

When looking at the overall death toll from coronavirus, official figures count deaths in three different ways, each giving a slightly different number.

First, government figures count people who died within 28 days of testing positive for coronavirus - and that total is now more than 126,000.

Second, ONS figures include all deaths where coronavirus was mentioned on the death certificate, even if the person had not been tested for the virus. This figure is more than 148,000 deaths, to 12 March.

The third measure counts all deaths over and above the usual number at the time of year - that figure was nearly 123,000 by 12 March.

In total, there were 12,465 deaths registered in the week to 12 March, which is five percent below the average seen in the five years 2015 to 2019.

Of that figure, 1,637 deaths were related to coronavirus - down by 28% from the previous week.

There have now been more deaths involving Covid than "excess" deaths, which means non-Covid deaths must be below usual levels.

This could be because of a milder flu season - resulting from less travel and more social distancing - and because some people who might have died for other reasons had there been no pandemic, died of Covid.

What is the R number?

The "R number" is the average number of people an infected person will pass the disease on to.

If R is below one, then the number of people contracting the disease will fall; if it is above one, the number will grow.

The government's current estimate for the R number across the whole of the UK is 0.7 to 0.9.

The estimate for England is currently 0.8 to 1.0. In Scotland it's currently 0.8 to 1.0, in Wales 0.6 to 0.9 and in Northern Ireland it is 0.75 to 0.95.

The government has said in the past that the R number is one of the most important factors in making policy decisions.

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