The 18 areas where Covid cases still rising – as interactive map lets you check YOUR local rates
THIS interactive map reveals how many daily coronavirus cases there are in your area, and how they have changed in one week.
It comes as different data sets disagree on whether the Covid outbreak has improved yet during the third lockdown.
To see the interactive map, click here.
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The map above shows how the outbreak has changed in every authority across the UK in the days January 8 to January 15.
The data is from the Government coronavirus dashboard, based on positive Covid tests, and shows that 18 of the 381 local authorities in the UK have seen an increase in cases.
'No change' in cases
The LCP model, which is not government funded and does not feed into scientific advice to ministers, suggests improvements made in the first week of lockdown have now stalled.
However,, led by Imperial College London, reported last night that coronavirus cases did not fall during the first 10 days of England's third lockdown.
Random swabbing of 142,000 people between January 6 and January 15 found "no evidence" of a decline in cases.
It said 1.58 per cent of people in England, or one in 65, were infected with Covid-19 in that 10-day spell.
Experts also estimated that the national R rate is 1.04, meaning the epidemic is still growing. The R number must be below 1 in order for the outbreak to shrink.
Professor Paul Elliot, who is leading the REACT study, suggested the current measures may not be strict enough to see a drop in infections and the reproductive rate.
Scientists think the new, more contagious mutation may be to blame, and warn infections may not fall unless we do more.
The estimates are in stark contrast to official Department of Health statistics, which suggest Britain's outbreak has shrunk every day for almost a fortnight.
Yesterday 38,900 people were reported to have tested positive for the disease, down on the 42,670 reported on January 13.
This is based on positive Covid test results and does not include asymptomatic cases - as the Imperial research does.
The Government said the REACT study does not yet take full account of the current lockdown measures.
Where are cases highest?
According to the Government dashboard, Knowsley in Merseyside currently has the highest infection rate in England, with 1,135.5 new cases per 100,000 people in the week to January 15, down 22 per cent in a week.
Slough in Berkshire, which had earlier this week been praised by Health Secretary Matt Hancock for its vaccine rollout, has the second highest rate, at 1,029.8, down 11 per cent in a week.
Barking & Dagenham in London is in third place, with 965.7 new cases per 100,000 people, an improvement of 41 per cent in seven days.
It means no borough in London has cases above 1,000 per 100,000 people, as has been the case for many weeks.
Looking at England alone, the ten places with the highest jumps in cases include West Devon, Erewash and Preston.
Their case rates are still well below the hotspot of Knowsley, however, at 155.9, 473.3, and 512.1, respectively.
It comes as Britain suffered its deadliest day since the coronavirus pandemic began with 1,820 reported deaths on Wednesday.
Official statistics now show that 3,505754 people have been diagnosed with the virus in Britain since the pandemic began last year.
And the total death toll has now reached a tragic 93,290.
As a result, government ministers have warned that the UK was "a long way off" from lifting current lockdown restrictions.
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Home Secretary Priti Patel said that it was "far too early" to speculate when measures will be eased.
She said: "We have a long way to go which is why you see me out with the police talking about the work we constantly do around compliance and enforcement."