UK Covid deaths pass 100,000 with 1,631 new fatalities and 20,089 cases – as Boris Johnson addresses nation

MORE than 100,000 people have now died with Covid in the UK – as Boris Johnson marked a bleak day in the battle against the deadly virus with a national address.

A further 1,631 people have died in hospitals, meaning 100,162 have died in total – less than a year since the first coronavirus death was recovered here.

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But there is hope that Britain is past the peak – as cases drop 26 per cent week-on-week.

A further 20,089 positive tests were recorded overnight – 40 per cent fewer than last Tuesday's total.

It comes after 22,195 more infections were reported yesterday in the lowest daily increase since mid-December.

Hospitalisations have also dropped 21 per cent on last Tuesday, although more than 3,500 people are still being admitted to hospitals every day.

The Prime Minister spoke from Downing Street this evening after the tragic milestone was reached.

He said: "I'm sorry to have to tell you that today the number of deaths recorded from Covid in the UK has surpassed 100,000.

"It's hard to compute the sorrow contained in that grim statistic – the years of life lost, the family gatherings not attended, and for so many relatives, the missed chance even to say goodbye.

"I offer my deepest condolences to everyone who has lost a loved one."

Reacting to the toll today, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “My thoughts are with each and every person who has lost a loved one – behind these heart-breaking figures are friends, families and neighbours.

“I know how hard the last year has been, but I also know how strong the British public’s determination is and how much we have all pulled together to get through this."

And Dr Yvonne Doyle, Public Health England's medical director, said: “This is a sobering moment in the pandemic.

"These are not just numbers. Each death is a person who was someone’s family member and friend."

She urged Brits to continue to stay at home, adding: "This sacrifice will help slow the spread, protect the NHS and save lives.”

The Office for National Statistics figures – which are collated more quickly than the Government's – earlier revealed there have been 103,704 fatalities in England and Wales with Covid on the death certificate.

The Department of Health's figures differ as officials only register deaths within 28 days of a positive Covid test. 

In England, a further 875 people have died in hospitals. Patients were aged between 33 and 101 years old, and 21 – aged between 52 and 93 – had no known underlying health conditions.

A further 752 cases and four deaths were reported in Scotland, and 570 new infections and eight deaths were recorded in Wales.

It comes as:

  • A minister has slammed the EU over its "vaccine nationalism" after Brussels threatened to block the sale of lifesaving jabs to Britain
  • Primary school-aged kids are 'resistant' to a super-infectious new strain of Covid – as officials mull reopening schools
  • Hols abroad have been 'axed' as the PM mulls hotel quarantine for UK arrivals
  • Medics say they're 'confident' that jabs work on mutant strains of the virus
  • Anti-lockdown riots in the Netherlands rage for a third night

Despite the soaring death toll – which puts the UK among the hardest-hit countries in the world – health chiefs say it's "possible" coronavirus will soon become a "much more treatable disease".

NHS England's chief executive Sir Simon Stevens told MPs on the Health and Social Care Committee today: "I think a lot of us in the health service are increasingly hopeful that the second half of the year and beyond we will also see more therapeutics and more treatments for coronavirus."

He said more treatments are "in the pipeline", adding: "I think it is possible that over the course of the next six to 18 months, coronavirus also becomes a much more treatable disease."

But he warned that "of course" vaccines are in short supply – hours after minister Nadhim Zahawi said there's enough jabs coming in to meet a mid-February deadline of inoculations for 13million of the most vulnerable.

Speaking to Piers Morgan on Good Morning Britain, Mr Zahawi admitted "supplies are tight" and "they continue to be" due to global demand for jabs.

So far, 6,853,327 people have received at least one jab in the UK.

Meanwhile, a Nightingale Hospital which never treated a coronavirus patient has opened as a mass vaccination centre.


Last April the NHS Nightingale Hospital North, on the outskirts of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, was transformed from an empty industrial unit into a 460-bed unit in case hospitals in the region were swamped with Covid patients.

The brand new unit opened to the public today – and will soon be able to offer thousands of jabs a day.

And Johnson & Johnson said today it will soon share details from its widely-watched coronavirus vaccine trial soon.

The pharma giant is racing to develop a single-dose jab, which could be given the green light by UK regulators in weeks.

The British Government has already ordered 30million doses.

Jab developers are rushing to provide as many doses as quickly as possible – as stats experts yesterday revealed that 8,000 British workers have now died from coronavirus.

Working men are twice as likely to die than women, new data reveals.

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Between March 9 and December 28, 5,128 men aged between 20 and 64 years old died from Covid.

Binmen and male lorry drivers were among the group most at risk from the virus, with the most deaths per 100,000 workers.

Women working in factories and as carers have seen the most fatalities out of all jobs in Britain.

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