UK’s Covid-19 deaths mapped: Interactive map shows London is still worst hit in England

UK’s Covid-19 deaths mapped: Interactive map shows London is still worst hit in England and Wales despite a deadly surge in the North as separate report confirms care home deaths surged 98% above average in March and April

  • There have been 138 Covid-19 deaths per 100,000 people in the capital – almost double national average of 81
  • Nine of 10 hardest-hit areas are London boroughs, including Brent (210), Newham (197) and Hackney (183) 
  • Middlesbrough and Salford among worst-affected areas outside of capital in another sign crisis moving north
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

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An interactive map which highlights coronavirus deaths by postcode in England and Wales shows that London was still the worst-hit region in the UK despite the epidemic migrating North in recent weeks. 

The map, which uses Office for National Statistics data, revealed there have been 138 Covid-19 deaths per 100,000 people in the capital – almost double the national average of 81 fatalities. 

Nine of the 10 local areas with the highest virus death rates in the UK are London boroughs, with Brent suffering 210.9 deaths per 100,000 population, followed by Newham (197) and Hackney (183).    

Middlesbrough (169 deaths per 100,000), Hertsmere in Hertfordshire (162) and Salford, Manchester (160) have suffered the three highest death rates outside of London as the epidemic shifts north. 

Many experts predict the death rate gap between London and the rest of England to shorten in the coming months because the virus’ reproduction rate has been squashed in the capital but continues to grow elsewhere.

The R-rate – the average number of people each patient infects – is estimated to be between 0.7 and 0.9 across the UK, and just 0.4 in London. But in the North West and South West of England, it is thought to be above 1. The R must stay below 1 or the disease could start to spread exponentially. 

Separate data from the ONS revealed care home deaths nearly doubled the five-year average in March and April, at the height of the outbreak in the UK.

A total 44,268 care homes residents fell victim to coronavirus during that two-month period, compared to the average 22,587 who normally die from other causes.  

Separate data from the ONS revealed care home deaths nearly doubled the five-year average in March and April, at the height of the outbreak in the UK

The ONS report analysed 46,687 Covid-19 deaths that were recorded between March 1 and May 31, which means it is two weeks out of date and thousands of fatalities have not been included. 

It also showed that the poorest in society are being killed by Covid-19 at twice the rate of people who live in the richest areas of the country. 

The most deprived areas in England have recorded an average 128 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to 59 fatalities in the wealthiest areas.  

In Wales, the most impoverished regions recorded 110 deaths per 100,000 people, nearly twice as high in the richest neighbourhoods, where the rate is 58 per 100,000. 

Sarah Caul, head of mortality analysis at the Office for National Statistics, said: ‘Although London had some of the highest COVID-19 mortality rates in the country during March and April, it is now experiencing lower mortality rates compared with most areas. 

‘During May, the region with the highest age-adjusted Covid-19 mortality rate was the North East, where the rate was double that of London. 

The South West region continued to have the lowest mortality rate overall and during each of the last three months.

‘Meanwhile, people living in more deprived areas have continued to experience Covid-19 mortality rates more than double those living in less deprived areas. General mortality rates are normally higher in more deprived areas, but COVID-19 appears to be increasing this effect.’

Overall, there were 46,687 deaths occurring in England and Wales between 1 March and 31 May 2020 and registered by 6 June 2020 that involved the coronavirus. This represented a quarter (26 per cent) of all deaths occurring over this period.

However, there have been at least 3,900 deaths in Scotland, according to the National Records of Scotland – the country’s official statistical body – meaning Britain’s true Covid death toll is already higher than 50,000.