January 2021 findings from COVID-19 study published
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Over 142,900 volunteers were tested in England from 6 to 15 January
2021 as part of one of the most significant COVID-19 studies. It
remains paramount everyone stays at home and follows the rules to
protect the NHS and save lives. The interim findings from the
eighth report of REACT, one of the country’s largest studies into
COVID-19 infections in England, have been published today by
Imperial College London and Ipsos MORI. Over 142,900 volunteers
were tested...Request free trial
The interim findings from the eighth report of REACT, one of the country’s largest studies into COVID-19 infections in England, have been published today by Imperial College London and Ipsos MORI. Over 142,900 volunteers were tested in England from 6 to 15 January to examine the levels of infection in the general population. The findings show infections in England have plateaued at the highest level recorded by a REACT study, with suggestions of a potential uptick. The report does not yet reflect the impact of national lockdown. Prevalence from 6 to 15 January was highest in London, with 1 in 36 people infected – more than double compared to the previous REACT report in early December. Infections had also more than doubled in the South East, East of England and West Midlands compared to the previous REACT report in early December. The main findings from the eighth REACT study show:
While prevalence has decreased in Yorkshire and the Humber and has remained stable across the East Midlands and North East, infection numbers remain high in all of these regions. The figures demonstrate everyone must stay at home to reduce infections, protect the NHS and save lives. Health Secretary Matt Hancock said:
Professor Paul Elliott, director of the programme at Imperial, said:
There has been increasing pressure on the NHS with 15,000 people admitted to hospitals since Christmas Eve – over 20 hospitals’ worth of new patients. While the vaccine programme continues to accelerate and expand to protect as many people as possible, with over 4 million people vaccinated, we do not know whether being vaccinated stops someone from passing the virus on to others. It will also be some time before the impact of the vaccination programme reduces pressures on hospitals. It is critical everyone continues to follow the rules, stays at home, reduces contact with others and maintains social distancing – remembering hands, face, space. Kelly Beaver, Managing Director of Public Affairs at Ipsos MORI said:
This report is the latest from the REACT study which 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. Background informationRead more information on the Real-time Assessment of Community Transmission (REACT) programme of work This study falls under Pillar 4 of the COVID-19 National Testing Programme, which focuses on mass surveillance in the general population. |
