The figures are as reported daily at coronavirus.data.gov.uk.[1]
From the week of 21 February 2022, the UK Health Security Agency stopped publishing dashboard updates at weekends. Figures for Saturday and Sunday are now combined with Monday's figures. The source stopped reporting numbers after May 2022.[2]
Daily cases, 2022 (NB scaled to a maximum of 240,000 per time period)
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Daily cases, 2021 (NB scaled to a maximum of 200,000 per day)
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Daily cases, 2020 (NB scaled to a maximum of 60,000 per day)
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Notes
Values for dates between 25 September and 1 October 2020 are questionable in light of announcements of 3 and 4 October: Following under-reporting due to a 'technical issue' between 25 September and 1 October, 15,841 additional cases were reported on 3 and 4 October. The error was caused by a limit on the number of columns in an
Excel spreadsheet.
Values for dates between 8 and 16 December 2020 are questionable in light of announcement of 16 December:
Public Health Wales announced that there had been a delay in transferring data from the
Lighthouse Labs which had resulted in under-reporting over the preceding week of approximately 11,000 positive tests. The 'missing' numbers were reported instead on 16 December.[3]
Warning: the values in the above graph are not directly comparable between different time periods because they were measured under different testing rates. It is therefore vital to consult
Test positivity rate and
New daily tests, and to understand the strategy for selection of subjects for testing.
References
These references will appear in the article, but this list appears only on this page.