- Covid infections rose in EVERY age group and region in England last week, official data shows but Matt Hancock says ministers will make June 21 decision based on deaths and serious illness instead of cases
- Public Health England data showed positive tests were up in all age groups in England in most recent week
- Unvaccinated younger groups saw bigger spikes than older generations who have had their jabs
- Biggest increase was among people in their 20s, who saw a 65 per cent surge in cases in a week
- Health Secretary said it is a 'good sign' that vaccinated people are making a minority of hospital admissions
- Said it is too soon for ministers to decide on the unlocking but they would be looking at hospitals and deaths
Coronavirus cases are on the up in every region of England and every age group with the biggest spike seen in people in their 20s, Public Health England figures showed today.
The weekly figures mark an inevitable rise in infections that scientists and ministers knew would happen once lockdown rules were ended, but come alongside fears that the Indian variant is close to triggering a third wave.
Ministers remain tight-lipped about whether social distancing will be allowed to end on June 21 as planned, but Matt Hancock said there was a 'good sign' that vaccinated people were making up only a minority of hospital admissions.
The Health Secretary said the government is keeping a close eye on daily case levels but stressed what 'really matters' is how many people end up in hospital and die from the disease and how well the jabs keep numbers down.
He also appealed for the public to be patient, warning it is still 'too early' to say whether the planned 'freedom day' can go ahead.
The PHE report showed that, in the last week of May, the positive test rate shot up by 63 per cent in the North West of England and by 65 per cent in people aged 20 to 29. It also rose 74 per cent in the South East but remained at lower levels than most other regions.
Younger adults and teenagers saw the worst increases in cases while the rise in older generations was slower, offering promise that the vaccines are protecting the most at-risk from getting infected with the virus.
Mr Hancock's comments came ahead of a G7 health ministers' meeting in Oxford, where they are expected to discuss the threat from variants after it emerged there is another one first seen in Nepal that is already in England.
Today's PHE report showed infection rates had risen in 112 areas of England in the week ending June 1 and come down in only 37, showing the country's outbreak as a whole is growing.
This aligns with figures from NHS Test & Trace and the Covid Symptom Study, which both noticed a spike in the numbers of people catching the virus in their most recent reports.
PORTUGAL CUT FROM UK TRAVEL GREEN LIST
Holidaymakers faced a hammer blow today as Portugal was removed from the UK's green list amid fears over the spread of the Nepal variant.
In a brutal overhaul, MailOnline understands that the only major holiday destination in the lowest bracket is being axed - with sources suggesting the new strain identified in the country was a significant factor in the decision.
No countries are being added to the 'green list', dashing hopes that places such as Malta, Jamaica and Grenada could be added to the roster.
And more countries are being put on the 'red list' that means returning travellers must go into quarantine hotels. They are thought to be Egypt, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, Bahrain, Sudan, Trinidad and Tobago and Afghanistan.
It comes amid alarm that a coronavirus variant linked to Nepal could pose a fresh threat to the escape from lockdown.
At least 20 cases of the strain, which combines mutations from the Indian and South African versions, have been spotted in the UK. And a case has been identified in Portugal - which does far less genomic screening than Britain.
Meanwhile, Labour has renewed demands for the 'amber list' to be scrapped to prevent mutant strains from being imported.
And in another setback for travellers the EU has again delayed a decision on whether the UK will be added to its 'white list' of safe countries from which leisure travel is welcome.
Growing numbers suggest the virus is not contained only to hotspots, but some areas and groups are worse affected than others.
By far the highest infection rate is in the North West of England – home to Indian 'Delta' variant hotspots Bolton and Blackburn – where there were 87 positive tests for every 100,000 people last week, up 63 per cent in a week.
Second ranked is Yorkshire & The Humber, with a rate of 39 per 100,000, followed by London (31), East Midlands (24), North East (24), West Midlands (23), South East (23), East Anglia (21) and the South West (9).
The biggest week-on-week rises were in the South East (74 per cent), the North West (63 per cent), the West Midlands (44 per cent) and London (34 per cent).
Between age groups, the 65 per cent spike to 52 cases per 100,000 among 20-somethings was the worst increase. The highest rate was in 10 to 19-year-olds, at 72 per 100,000.
While young age groups saw big week-on-week surges in the positive test rate, ranging from 29 to 65 per cent for people between 10 and 50, growth was much slower in older groups, with only a 14 per cent rise in over-80s and 19 per cent among people in their 70s.
Rates were significantly lower among the elderly groups, too – just five cases per 100,000, 10 times lower than in people in their 20s.
Mr Hancock said: 'It's too early to say what the decision will be about step four of the road map, which is scheduled to be no earlier than June 21.
'Of course I look at those data every day, we publish them every day, the case numbers matter but what really matters is how that translates into the number of people going to hospital, the number of people sadly dying.
'The vaccine breaks that link – the question is how much the link has yet been broken because the majority of people who ended up in hospital are not fully vaccinated.
'That's a good sign if you like because it means that the vaccine is clearly protecting people from ending up in hospital but it also demonstrates that we need to keep going with this vaccine programme.'
Boris Johnson insisted last night that he still sees 'nothing in the data' to stop June 21 going ahead, after official statistics showed Covid made up just one in 150 deaths across England and Wales last week.