The number of new cases of coronavirus in the UK has exceeded 1,000 in the last 24 hours.
The most recent official figures also mean that another 102 people have died from the virus since yesterday at the same time.
Higher numbers will continue to worry officials who care about a fatal wave of coronavirus, with schools weeks before reopening.
Two regions in north-west England were warned that they would likely face stricter blocking restrictions as coronavirus instances increased.
Pfinishle and Oldham were among the regions of the country where new measures were taken at the end of July to prevent others from meeting at home or indoor rooms.
But the government in the regions says rates have continued to rise.
In the week ending August 8, Oldham reported 255 new instances to 137 instances last week.
To learn more about today’s latest updates, visit our LIVE blog below.
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Cherie Blair warned that the UK was in danger of returning to society in the 1950s after the coronavirus pandemic.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair’s wife said there is a threat that women who juggle family chores and childcare while running in the house can see their careers derailed after the crisis.
“There is no danger after all this can lead a step back,” he said.
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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on Tuesday 5064171 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 40522 cases of its previous count, and said the number of deaths had increased from 565 to 162407.
The CDC reported its respiratory disease case count known as COVID-19, caused by the new coronavirus, starting at 4pm. And on August 10th to your previous report a day earlier.
CDC figures necessarily reflect cases reported through individual states.
The number of coronavirus deaths in the UK has increased to 102, while the number of new cases is expanding across more than 1,000.
The total number of other people who died of Covid-19 in Britain is now 46,628 in all contexts.
The delay in the publication of the last death toll due to technical difficulties, Public Health England said.
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A total of 1,148 new COVID-19 instances were shown in the UK at 9 a.m. (09:00 GMT) on Tuesday, up from 816 on Monday, according to data.
The cumulative total of instances in the United Kingdom 312,789.
This is only the time since June when the daily total of new instances shown exceeded 1000. The example last Sunday, when the daily figure is 1,062.
The British government stopped posting updates on the number of deaths by COVID-19 on 17 July due to a review of how the statistics were reported, which has not yet been completed.
More than 46,000 people have died from the disease in the UK, the death toll in Europe.
The French fitness government reported on Tuesday 1397 new Covid-19 infections in 24 hours, almost double Monday’s total.
The Ministry of Health reported that there were 15 new deaths in the hospital due to the disease, compared to a 16-day build-up in a three-day era between Monday and Saturday, with a total death toll of 30,354.
The number of other people hospitalized for the disease fell after Monday for the first time in two and a half months.
The World Health Organization obtained enough data on the Russian Covid-19 vaccine to compare it, Jarbas Barbosa, deputy director of its regional branch, the Pan American Health Organization, said Tuesday.
When asked about possible vaccine production projects in Brazil, Barbosa said this would not be done until the end of the Phase 2 and 3 trials to ensure its protection and effectiveness.
“Any vaccine manufacturer will have to stick to this procedure that ensures it is and is advised by WHO,” he said at a virtual conference in Washington.
Residents of two northwestern regions have been begged to possibly face stricter blocking restrictions as coronavirus cases continue to increase.
Pfinishle in Lancashire and Oldham, Greater Manchester, were among the regions of the country where new measures were implemented at the end of July to prevent others from meeting at home or indoor rooms.
But the government in the regions says rates have continued to rise.
Oldham City Council said figures for the week ending August 8 showed 255 new ones in Oldham, up from 137 last week.
Pendle Council suggested citizens get tested, even if they show no symptoms.
The government has announced that it will not publish the death toll from coronavirus.
Shortly after four o’clock in the afternoon. Today, Public Health England announced that it would stop the update after months of data.
The branch tweeted: “Due to technical knowledge processing difficulties, knowledge of deaths in England and the UK is not up to date today.”
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Northern Ireland’s Health Minister Robin Swann expressed fears about the growing number of Covid-19 cases in the region.
Swann said 194 tests had been conducted in the last seven days.
“I’m involved in building positive cases in the last few days,” he said.
“We now have an average of more than 27 new instances consistent with the day, compared to about 3 per day a few weeks ago.
“It is a great fear that nine other people would be admitted to the hospital with Covid-19, two of whom are lately in the ICU. This highlights Covid-19’s persistent risk and we will all have to do everything in our power to deal with it.
Britain will be officially declared in recession for the first time since the currency crisis on Wednesday, when figures are expected to show that the pandemic plunged the economy to a record 21% between April and June.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) is expected to see the massive contraction of the quarter of the moment, the worst in Western Europe, and the UK’s downturn in recession after a 2.2% drop in the first 3 months of 2020.
A recession is explained as two successive quarters of the fall in gross domestic product (GDP), which has not been observed in the UK since 2008 and 2009 in the currency crisis.
This comes after the ONS’s knowledge showed that around 730,000 British employees have been removed from the payroll of British corporations since March, when the coronavirus blockade began, a sign of the negative consequences of the pandemic on the economy.
Employment also fell from the point in a quarter since 2009 between May and June.
France is extending the ban on public gatherings of more than 5,000 people as of October 30, while coronavirus infections are on the rise, Prime Minister Jean Castex said Tuesday.
Castex said at a press convention that the coronavirus scene in France has gone “in the direction” for more than two weeks.
On Monday, France reported the first significant increase in the number of other people hospitalized with COVID-19 since the end of its strict blockade.
Confirmed cases of coronavirus in Scotland have increased in one day, Nicola Sturgeon announced.
Speaking at the Scottish government’s coronavirus briefing on Tuesday, the Prime Minister said that less from the new cases, 27, were in the Grampian NHS region, which covers the Aberdeen epidemic.
He said it was still transparent how many of these new cases were similar to this epidemic, but there were indications that the accumulation rate was slowing.
Aberdeen City Council was placed in a local lockout last Wednesday, with orders to close shops, restaurants and bars, citizens were banned from receiving visitors to their homes and an eight-kilometre restriction was imposed.
Sturgeon said there have been 253 cases of coronavirus in Aberdeen since the outbreak began on 26 July.
The prime minister said: “The rate of accumulation is slowing down at this stage, but of course we remain very attentive.”
He praised the paintings of touch search groups that have known 875 touches, adding, “It’s transparent that we’re likely to be able to identify new instances and touches at least in the next few days.”
The accumulation in the total number of coronavirus cases increased from 29 on Monday and raised the total number of other people in Scotland who tested positive for the virus to 19079.
Police have made nearly 270 arrests for coronavirus law in Scotland.
Scotland’s constitutional secretary, Mike Russell, told Holyrood that officials used the powers to impose 3,310 fines, carry out 349 forced dispersions and make 268 arrests between 27 March and 21 July.
He said 94% of the 61,593 interventions had been non-violent dispersions.
Scottish academics whose examination effects have been degraded will have their initial qualification restored.
In a change in the primaries, Scottish Education Secretary John Swinney said more than 124,000 academics caught in exams would get estimated grades through their teachers.
Mr. Swinney apologized to the academics affected by the fiasco and admitted that “we haven’t been there to do things for all young people.”
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Scottish football can get the ‘red card’ if violations of coronavirus rules continue, Nicola Sturgeon warned.
After Celtic player Boli Bolingoli did not quarantine him after a holiday in Spain, the prime minister said that professional football deserves itself on a “yellow card”.
At the Scottish government’s coronavirus briefing on Tuesday, he said he expected Aberdeen or Celtic to play matches next week.
The SPFL announced fites between Aberdeen and Celtic in the middle of the week, and the adjustment between the two clubs scheduled for this weekend will be postponed.
The prime minister said news of Bolingoli’s movements came in an assembly when national clinical director Jason Leitch spoke to managers and players about the importance of following the rules.
Sturgeon said the footballer’s movements were a “flagrant violation of the guidelines” of elite sports.
She said: “This is simply acceptable. Every day, I ask members of the public to make great sacrifices in the way they live their lives.”
There were six other Covid-19-related deaths in English hospitals, while two more deaths were recorded in Wales today.
In Scotland and Northern Ireland, no further deaths have been reported.
Of the last six deaths recorded in England, four occurred in the north-west, one in the Midlands and one in the southeast.
Find out more about national figures here
A 15-year-old boy admitted beating a Singapore law student by saying, “I don’t need your coronavirus in my country.”
The teenager’s “vicious and involuntary” attack on Oxford Street in February left victim Jonathan Mok, 23, with a bloody, bruted face, a court heard.
Mok had to go through surgery after beating in the capital’s grocery shopping district, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.
The student returning home from a dinner party in central London when “clearly he was the target of this hate crime because of his ethnic appearance,” CPS Attorney General Daniel Kavanagh said.
The child, whose name is due to legal reasons, admitted to having suffered serious physical harm or physical harm at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court on Monday, the CPS said.
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Boris Johnson warned that the UK faces “bumpy months,” as grim new numbers show that the number of jobs lost in a singles quarter has peaked for a decade a decade in the midst of the coronavirus crisis.
Some 81,000 jobs were lost between May and June, bringing the total from April to June 220,000, the largest quarterly decline since 2009, according to the Office of National Statistics.
More than 730,000 people have disposed of the company’s payroll since the lockout began in March, according to the data.
The Prime Minister said today that this will be “a very difficult time for people” and that there is “a long way to go.”
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Greece has imposed a strict night curfew on many islands, as the country enters a wave of moments.
This means that bars and restaurants in Mykonos, Santorini, Corfu, Rhodes, Zante and Crete will be closed until 7 a.m., according to the Greek government.
The cities of Thessaloniki, Larissa, Volos and Katerini are also affected by curfew, which will last until August 23.
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Debenhams will eliminate 2500 jobs at its outlets and warehouses as the chain suffers as a result of coronavirus blockade.
The task trims the roles of the entire Debenhams logo, adding within its distribution centers, as the chain plans to close additional stores.
Lately there is no breakdown of the clippings store by store.
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Eating in the dining room to help diners received an average reduction of 5.11 euros each, as more than 10 million reduced food was mocked during the first week of the program.
New figures show that corporations have filed 53.7 million pounds of claims for 10,540,394 food from the government’s program.
Designed for Britons to return to pubs, restaurants and cafes, it offers a 50% discount on comfortable food and beverages up to 10 euros according to consistent income.
The number of other people receiving relief is expected to increase as the program continues every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday through August.
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A primary school exam will show that older youth are more likely to pass on coronavirus as easily as adults, reported today.
According to the Times, the studies, which will be published next week, suggest that number one schools are in little danger, with only six positive tests of the 9,000 evaluated so far.
But young people over the age of 10 transmit the virus better because “their bodies begin to act like small adults,” one researcher told the Times.
The new key points will cast new doubts about plans for all students to return to English schools starting in September.
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With more than 20 million cases of coronavirus worldwide, scientists are relentlessly running toward a cure for the disease.
Now, scientists at Daewoong Pharmaceutical Co in South Korea say an undeniable antiparasitic drug can be used to treat covid-19 patients.
The drug, called niclosamide, is used to treat other people with tapeworms, but has now obtained regulatory approval from India for testing in covid-19 patients.
According to Reuters, the drug has already been tested in ferrets and has been found to cause infection in the lung tissues of animals as well as inflammation.
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The number of Britons on zero-hour contracts has surpassed one million for the first time, as the coronavirus threatens a safe job massacre.
A list of new statistics released today shows the devastating effect of Covid-19 on millions of unsafe employees in the UK.
Figures show that 730,000 British employees have been removed from the UK corporations’ payroll since March.
Meanwhile, 5.6 million other people now gain universal credit advantages, nearly double the 2.9 million other people who gain benefits from it in February.
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New Zealand showed that the country had ended its streak of more than 100 days “virus-free” after 4 members of the same family tested positive.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced the network’s broadcast in Auckland on Tuesday when she imposed a three-day emergency blockade.
The north island’s main city is back on a “level three” blockade as a result of these new cases when officials begin searching for urgent contacts.
It occurs despite strict border controls in New Zealand and the first cases of controlled outdoor isolation, ending its 102-day virus-free status.
This will be a jolt for kiwis largely able to come back to life after the country approached the early stages of the pandemic with a quick and hard blockade that paid off.
Neither the man in his 50s who took the test nor the rest of his home south of Auckland had a history of foreign travel, the Director General of the Department of Health, Dr. Ashley Bloomfield, said Tuesday at a press convention.
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Russia’s Ministry of Health has given regulatory approval for the world’s first coronavirus vaccine, President Vladimir Putin said.
The jab evolved through the Gamaleya Institute in Moscow and was approved after less than two months of human testing, the Russian leader said.
He claims he even allowed his own daughter to receive the experimental vaccine.
But the speed with which Russia has evolved a coup has raised considerations that it can simply put national prestige ahead of science and security.
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People who respond to NHS tests and follow-up calls are at risk of being knocked on the door due to a primary disruption to the outsourced personal system.
The number of national touch scores in England will increase from 18,000 to 12,000 over the next two weeks, after the “Fight the World” program has been plagued by problems.
Under the new plans, non-NHS call managers will work together with local public fitness officials. If the national team touches a resident within a “given time period”, the knowledge will be passed on to local public fitness officials.
They will then keep up to date by visiting other people at home, which has already been done through some local groups in places like Liverpool.
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Good Morning Britain host Kate Garraway remained “moved” on screen Tuesday after learning that her ongoing discussions about blood plasma donations have noticed an increase in the number of donors.
Since requesting donations on display last week, amid ongoing testing, the NHS has noticed a 30% increase in the number of others who have had a coronavirus.
The procedure provides others who are still fighting Covid-19 with the blood plasma and antibodies of someone whose framework has been to fight the virus, giving them the possibility to fight.
Kate spoke braidfully into the air about her husband Derek Draper’s long war with the coronavirus when she comes out of a coma, but is in danger of life-changing effects as she continues her difficult recovery.
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Domino’s Pizza saw increased sales in the UK and Ireland as demand for takeout increased due to the blocking of coronavirus.
But he did not necessarily see the benefits fit, due to the accusation of additional security measures taken by the pandemic.
The organisation recorded a 5.5% increase in overall formula sales in the six months ending 28 June, with comparable sales in the UK of 4.8%, outlets opened near other outlets in the so-called divided territories.
But the organization said underlying pre-tax earnings had fallen 4.6 cents to 47.6 million pounds in the six months leading up to June 28 after exceeding 6.2 million pounds in prices for new security measures.
Domino’s collected disabled visitors during the closure of Covid-19, where collections fell 87% this quarter, while deliveries increased by 22%, or 23% more during the closing period.
The organization said that in terms of sales, deliveries more than offset the good fortune of the collection, although order numbers were affected and fell by 11% during the blockade and 5% overall in the first part; However, you have since restarted contactless collections as lock restrictions. Facilitate.
Domino’s said recent exchanges had been encouraging: driven by the return of Premier League football, an accumulation in the UK remains and a VAT relief on hot plates.
Health Minister Edward Argar said students’ facials “were nothing imaginable at this stage.”
He told the BBC Breakfast: “Based on the many studies we’ve noticed so far, I think parents can be sure that their children can return to school safely and that it’s very important that their children return to school so they can continue their studies. education.”
Asked about the masks, he said, “Well, that’s nothing that’s right now. We have been transparent and the Department of Education has made it clear that this poses a challenge to the ability to teach and the ability to be.” informed in certain contexts.
“We don’t think it’s mandatory right now, especially since we’re necessarily setting up other elegance equipment or year-old equipment like social bubbles… But for now, the measures that have been put in place around social estrangement, around those bubbles and around the facility that will be tested if mandatory, are the right ones to continue protecting our schools when they reopen.
He added: “What we have done is that we have been – rightly me – willing to be guided through clinical recommendations on things like masks and other facets that, as you may have noticed in the last three or four months, has evolved.