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MORE cases of coronavirus - which has already claimed almost 500 lives - are expected in the UK, health bosses have warned.

Cases of the deadly illness are growing by the thousands every day with more than 24,000 people infected since the outbreak emerged in December.

Read our coronavirus live blog for all the latest news and updates

 Two women wearing face masks leave the Staycity Hotel in York, where two people were struck down with coronavirus
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Two women wearing face masks leave the Staycity Hotel in York, where two people were struck down with coronavirusCredit: PA:Press Association
 Michael Martin, with his wife and newborn son during the flight from Wuhan back to the UK, before being placed into quarantine
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Michael Martin, with his wife and newborn son during the flight from Wuhan back to the UK, before being placed into quarantineCredit: PA:Press Association

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has said the Government is "taking no chances" with British citizens at risk of coronavirus.

It comes as 14 more nationals and their dependants have been flown out of China.

On Tuesday, the Foreign Office urged all British nationals to leave China after the outbreak continued to claim lives.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast today, Mr Hancock said the advice was a "science-led approach" based on the severity of the virus and its impact in China.

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 Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the Government is 'taking no chances' with coronavirus
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Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the Government is 'taking no chances' with coronavirusCredit: Alamy Live News

Asked how logistically Britons are expected to return to the UK, he said: "There are still commercial flights available.

"The principle that we are taking is that we want to take no chances with this virus.

"We want to take a science-led approach.

"The approach we have been taking is very much driven by the advice of the chief medical officer.

"This is a very serious virus and having a very serious impact in China.

"There are two cases only here in the UK but we do expect more, so we are taking no chances."

Killer coronavirus: The 5 early warning signs

Coronavirus is the name for a large family of viruses that cause illness ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases such as SARS.

The new coronavirus, 2019-nCoV, is a new strain that has not been previously identified in humans.

It first emerged about a month ago and is thought to have jumped from bats to humans, via a possible but unknown animal, in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

One of the best ways to protect yourself from catching 2019-nCoV is to be aware of the symptoms.

According to the NHS and the World Health Organisation (WHO), early symptoms of coronavirus infection usually include:

  1. A runny nose
  2. A cough and/or sore throat
  3. A high temperature
  4. Feeling tired
  5. Difficulty breathing

These symptoms are similar to other respiratory illnesses such as the flu and the common cold.

However, this new strain is said to more likely to trigger a cough and fever, experts have noted.

And they warn the condition can progress and victims can develop severe complications.

These include pneumonia and swelling in the lungs, which can make it hard for the lungs to pass oxygen into the bloodstream - leading to organ failure and death.

Severe pneumonia can kill people by causing them to "drown" in the fluid flooding their lungs.

Last night, eight British nationals and their dependants left the virus-hit city of Wuhan on a flight to Auckland, New Zealand.

Diplomat Danae Dholakia said the Air New Zealand flight was delayed to allow the final passenger, a four-year-old British child, to get clearance to fly.

It was announced late on Tuesday that the UK Government will charter a final flight from China to bring British nationals back to the UK this week.

The plane is expected to leave in the early hours of Sunday morning local time and will land at RAF Brize Norton, the Foreign Office said, adding that they want to ensure that all British nationals in Hubei province contact their team to register if they want to leave on the flight.

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Earlier, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said: ";We now advise British nationals in China to leave the country if they can, to minimise their risk of exposure to the virus."

It's thought 165 Britons and their dependants remain in Hubei province, the epicentre of the outbreak, while 108 people have requested assistance to leave as of the early hours of Wednesday.

A total of 94 UK nationals and family members have already been evacuated to Britain from Wuhan on two flights which arrived on Friday and Sunday.

The death toll from the coronavirus outbreak continues to rise with Chinese authorities reporting 490 victims and an increase in the number of cases to 24,324.

Mr Hancock said two patients confirmed to have the virus in the UK remain in quarantine, while a Briton has tested negative after falling ill on a flight back from China.

Speaking of the Chinese nationals, he said: "They've been in isolation and when they are being treated they are being treated by people who are themselves protected from catching the virus from them so that process has worked well."

He added a man who fell ill on an Air France flight has now tested negative.

Cruise ship quarantine

In Japan nearly 3,000 passengers, including two Britons, were quarantined on board a cruise ship after 10 passengers tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday morning local time.

Among those stuck on the Diamond Princess cruise ship Yokohama Bay, near Tokyo, are David and Sally Abel.

Mr Abel, of Woodford Halse in Oxfordshire, said: "It appears that our quarantine is on board the ship, that we will not be taken off to a hospital.

"The 10 people that are affected, they are being taken off very soon by the local coastguard into a medical facility.

 Cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in 25 countries - including the UK
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Cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in 25 countries - including the UKCredit: Reuters
 Experts are warning people to ditch face masks and wash their hands instead to stop the spread of coronavirus
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Experts are warning people to ditch face masks and wash their hands instead to stop the spread of coronavirusCredit: AFP or licensors
 Volunteers in protective suits disinfect a railway station in Changsha, Hunan province, China, today
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Volunteers in protective suits disinfect a railway station in Changsha, Hunan province, China, todayCredit: Reuters

"We are to remain on board the ship and we are confined to our cabins.

British health officials are trying to trace 239 people who flew from Wuhan to the UK before travel restrictions came into force.

The Department of Health said that, as of Tuesday, 414 people have tested negative for coronavirus.

The World Health Organisation said it is still early in the outbreak, but coronavirus does not yet constitute a pandemic.

Meanwhile, the University of York confirmed that a student who contracted coronavirus returned to his apartment but did not come into contact with other residents.

The unnamed student, who is being treated with a relative at a specialist facility in Newcastle, was not in the Vita Student block when he came into contact with the virus but "did return to their room on one occasion and stayed overnight", the university said, as it moved to reassure other students.

In a statement on Tuesday, it said: "During this brief period the student did not meet other residents or staff at the building or make use of the communal facilities."

Elsewhere, Public Health England (PHE) confirmed a Belgian woman on board the same French flight that brought back UK citizens from China on Sunday has tested positive for the new strain.

Nick Phin, PHE's National Infection Service deputy director, said: "All of the individuals who were on this flight are currently in supervised isolation and are being monitored for symptoms."

Ten cases of Coronavirus confirmed on quarantined cruise ship held off Japan 
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