These surveys will be a scaled-back version of the initial infection monitoring levels that ran for almost three years.
The monitoring and testing of coronavirus levels is set to return this winter, after being ended earlier in March 2023.
However, a new study is set to begin in November, and will run until March 2024. This study will see up to 32,000 lateral flow tests being carried out each week, with as many as 200,000 members of the public invited to take part. The study is being co-ordinated by the Office for National Statistics and the UK Health Security Agency , which oversaw the original survey together with Oxford University.
The number of people in hospital who have tested positive for Covid-19 has risen since July, but appears to have stabilised in the last two weeks and remains well below levels reached last winter. The NHS said people with Covid can go back to their normal life if they begin to feel better, or do not have a high temperature.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination have negligible effects on migraine severity, research showsitemprop=description content=Research published in the European Journal of Neurology indicates that COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination have negligible effects on migraine severity.
Read more »
Redesigned COVID dashboard tracks COVID, flu, RSV in Mass.the Massachusetts Department of Public Health on Thursday launched a refreshed dashboard to track trends and provide the public with helpful information focused\u2026
Read more »
NI woman tells Covid-19 inquiry of 'anger and disgust' after dad died aloneGerry McLarnon, a teacher and musician, died from hospital-acquired Covid on December 23 2020 at the age of 67
Read more »
Covid Inquiry: 'My daddy had no one with him with he died'A woman whose father died in Antrim hospital during lockdown gives evidenced to the Covid inquiry.
Read more »
11 red flag Covid symptoms that shouldn't be ignored as Pirola strain hits UKHealth experts say the new coronavirus mutation, dubbed Pirola, has approximately 30 different mutations and could be hard to differentiate from a typical cold during winter.
Read more »