Interim results from the fourth report of the country’s largest
study on Coronavirus rates of infection have been published
today.
The study examines levels of infection in the general population
in England by testing over 150,000 participants each month over a
two-week period.
Over 80,000 volunteers out of 150,000 have been tested so far
between 18th and 26thSeptember. Findings
show infections increased substantially across the country before
the R Rate fell to around 1.1, suggesting the growth of infection
may be slowing. It is estimated 1 in 200 people in England were
infected with the virus, reinforcing the need to remain vigilant.
Today’s report shows prevalence of infection increased across all
age groups and regions. Infection was highest in those aged 18-24
– with 1 in 100 people infected - and cases increased seven fold
in those aged over 65. The North West had the highest levels of
infection and the number of infections in London increased
five-fold.
The final report and findings of all 150,000 volunteers tested
between 18th September and 5th October will be published next
week.
The high rate of infection reinforces the need for the public to
follow the latest rules. Individuals must only meet socially in
groups of up to six people in any settings indoors or outdoors,
including your home, restaurants and pubs. There are some
exemptions including organised sports, weddings and funerals and
formal childcare.
It is important to continue to keep your distance from others
outside your household, download the NHS Test and Trace app and
follow advice from NHS Test and Trace if contacted. If you
develop symptoms you must self-isolate, along with your
household, and get a test. Some areas in England are subject to
other local restrictions and it is vital residents follow the
rules in place in their area.
Professor Paul Elliott, Director of the programme at
Imperial from the School of Public Health, said:
“While our latest findings show some early evidence that the
growth of new cases may have slowed, suggesting efforts to
control the infection are working, the prevalence of infection is
the highest that we have recorded to date. This reinforces the
need for protective measures to limit the spread of the disease
and the public’s adherence to these, which will be vital to
minimise further significant illness and loss of life from
COVID-19.”
Kelly Beaver, Managing Director- Public Affairs at Ipsos
MORI said:
“The continuing support of the public by taking part in the study
is something we remain immensely grateful for. The number of
participants gives this study the robustness and thoroughness
which marks it out as world leading. Ipsos MORI would like to
thank everyone who’s volunteered so far and those who will
volunteer for further rounds of this study.”
The report was commissioned by DHSC and carried out by a
world-class team of scientists, clinicians and researchers at
Imperial College London, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust
and Ipsos MORI.
Notes to editors
Top findings for over 80,000 volunteers between
19th and 26th September (9 day period)
compared to previous study (24 August to 7th September)
- 363 out of 84,610 volunteers tested positive with prevalence
of 0.55%. It means 55 people per 10,000 are infected, which is an
increase on 13 people per 10,000 in the last report.
- This implies 411,000 people in England have the virus that
causes COVID-19 meaning over 1 in 200 people were infected at any
one time.
- Prevalence has increased across all ages. Prevalence was
highest in those aged 18-24 at 0.96% meaning 1 in 100 people in
this age group are infected. In the 65+ age group prevalence
increased 7-fold from 0.04% to 0.29% compared to the last report.
- Prevalence increased in all regions. Highest prevalence is
the North West at 0.86%. London has increased 5 fold from 0.10%
to 0.49%.
- R Rate has decreased from 1.7 to 1.1 suggesting some
deceleration, but with considerable uncertainty.
- People of Asian and black ethnicity are twice as likely to
have the virus that causes COVID-19 compared to white people
- 50% of test positive volunteers did not have symptoms at the
time of testing or the week before, but this does not mean they
did not later develop symptoms.
- The pre-print report embargoed to 00.01 THURSDAY 1st
OCTOBER 2020 can be downloaded here: https://fileexchange.imperial.ac.uk/
- Claim ID: WRHVXJMbhGv7Jxe9
- Claim Passcode: Za8ghTzYSApGFTPm
- The report was commissioned by DHSC and carried out by a
world-class team of scientists, clinicians and researchers at
Imperial College London, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust
and Ipsos MORI.
- More information on the REal-time Assessment of Community
Transmission (REACT) programme of work can be found here –
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/medicine/research-and-impact/groups/react-study/real-time-assessment-of-community-transmission-findings/
- This study falls under Pillar 4 of the Covid-19 National
Testing Programme, which focuses on mass surveillance in the
general population. This is the second study which looks at a
representative cross section of the whole population.