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COVID-19: Infections have levelled off and may have started falling, official data shows

Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show 4,883,100 people in the UK had the disease in the week to 2 April. That's a drop of 0.5% from the week before.

File photo dated 08/01/22 of a testing solution dripping into a Covid 19 lateral flow testing strip. Covid-19 testing should continue to be free for all to protect people at severe risk of illness if they get the virus, a group of charities has said. Issue date: Thursday February 17, 2022.
Image: The surge in COVID infections has levelled off and may have started to decline, ONS data suggests
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The surge in COVID infections has levelled off and may have started to decline, according to the latest official data.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show 4,883,100 people in the UK had the disease in the week to 2 April.

That's a fall of 0.5% from the week before.

It confirms the trend shown on the COVID dashboard a fortnight ago.

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The ONS tracks the number of people who have the infection, rather than new cases, so it lags behind the dashboard.

People can still test positive two weeks after being infected.

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The data shows 1 in 13 people in England, Wales and Scotland had the infection last week.

In Northern Ireland, the rate was 1 in 16.

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That suggests infections are rising in Wales, but are level or falling elsewhere.

There's no clear trend in different age groups, with infections rising in some but declining in others.

Infection rates continued to rise in the over-70s, up from 6.6% last week to 7.1%, but ONS charts suggest they are levelling off.

The NHS will be relieved the surge may be coming to an end.

Large numbers of people coming into hospitals for treatment of other medical conditions have been testing positive, disrupting services.

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High rates of staff absences in all areas of the economy are also causing significant challenges for some businesses.

The surge has been driven by the highly infectious BA.2 variant of Omicron and the lifting of all restrictions.

ONS data shows infections had been rising by between 25% and 30% each week in mid-March, before slowing slightly last week.

BA.2 caused short, sharp spikes in infections in Denmark and the Netherlands, but cases have fallen steeply since because of high rates of immunity.