1. Main points
The following points are for the week ending 13 July 2022 for England and Wales, and the week ending 14 July 2022 for Northern Ireland and Scotland.
- The percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase in England; trends were uncertain in Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland.
- In England, the estimated number of people testing positive for COVID-19 was 3,147,700 (95% credible interval: 3,012,300 to 3,290,500), equating to 5.77% of the population, or around 1 in 17 people.
- In Wales, the estimated number of people testing positive for COVID-19 was 183,200 (95% credible interval: 150,300 to 219,600), equating to 6.03% of the population, or around 1 in 17 people.
- In Northern Ireland, the estimated number of people testing positive for COVID-19 was 88,400 (95% credible interval: 63,100 to 117,500), equating to 4.82% of the population, or around 1 in 20 people.
- In Scotland, the estimated number of people testing positive for COVID-19 was 340,900 (95% credible interval: 284,100 to 402,700), equating to 6.48% of the population, or around 1 in 15 people.
About this bulletin
The positivity rate is the percentage of people who have tested positive for COVID-19 on a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test at a point in time. We use current COVID-19 infections to mean testing positive for SARS-CoV-2, with or without having symptoms, on a swab taken from the nose and throat. This is different to the incidence rate, which is a measure of only the new PCR positive cases in a given time period. Data are based on confirmed positive COVID-19 test results from those living in private households, excluding those living in care homes or other communal establishments.
All daily modelled estimates are provisional and subject to revision. See Section 10: Measuring the data and Section 11: Strengths and limitations for more details. There is a higher degree of uncertainty for data broken down by smaller population groups compared with England as a whole.
Early management information from the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey is made available to government decision-makers to inform their response to COVID-19. Occasionally we may publish figures early if it is considered in the public interest. We will ensure that we pre-announce any ad hoc or early publications as soon as we can. These will include supporting information where possible to aid user understanding. This is consistent with guidance from the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR).
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey is moving from a study worker data collection method to a more flexible approach for participants. We will introduce a digital questionnaire and send swab and blood sample kits through the post. Further information on what these changes mean and how the survey will continue to be valuable can be found in our recent blog post.
During this period of transition, we are temporarily pausing our incidence and sub-regional analysis. Most recent updates for these outputs are available in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey datasets. We have also not included our single year of age analysis this week. While we transition to our new digital data collection method, we will review whether we include our single year of age analysis on a weekly basis based on the quality of the data.
Back to table of contents2. COVID-19 by UK countries
The percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase in England in the week ending 13 July 2022. The trend in the percentage of people testing positive for COVID-19 was uncertain in Wales in the week ending 13 July 2022, and in Northern Ireland and Scotland in the week ending 14 July 2022.
Our estimates contain all variants of COVID-19 that were circulating at the time the data was collected.
Country | Estimated average % of the population testing positive for COVID-19 | 95% credible interval | Estimated average number of people testing positive for COVID-19 | 95% credible interval | Estimated average ratio of the population testing positive for COVID-19 | 95% credible interval | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | ||||
England | 5.77 | 5.52 | 6.03 | 3,147,700 | 3,012,300 | 3,290,500 | 1 in 17 | 1 in 18 | 1 in 17 |
Wales | 6.03 | 4.94 | 7.22 | 183,200 | 150,300 | 219,600 | 1 in 17 | 1 in 20 | 1 in 14 |
Northern Ireland | 4.82 | 3.44 | 6.40 | 88,400 | 63,100 | 117,500 | 1 in 20 | 1 in 30 | 1 in 16 |
Scotland | 6.48 | 5.40 | 7.65 | 340,900 | 284,100 | 402,700 | 1 in 15 | 1 in 19 | 1 in 13 |
Download this table Table 1: Estimated percentage of the population testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) by UK country
.xls .csvFigure 1: The percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase in England; trends were uncertain in Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland in the most recent week
Estimated percentage of the population testing positive for COVID-19 on nose and throat swabs, UK, 18 July 2021 to 14 July 2022
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Notes:
- Official reported estimates are plotted at a reference point believed to be most representative of the given week.
- Official estimates are displayed over a rolling year up to the most recent week. The full time series of our official estimates from 27 April 2020 onwards are available in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey datasets.
- There is a higher degree of uncertainty in our estimates for Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland, compared with England. This is shown by wider credible intervals.
- The reference week is 7 to 13 July 2022 for England and Wales, and 8 to 14 July 2022 for Northern Ireland and Scotland.
Download the data
About our estimates
Our headline estimates of the percentage of people testing positive in England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland are the latest official estimates.
Official estimates should be used to understand the positivity rate for a single point in time and are our best and most stable estimates, used in all previous outputs. They are based on a reference day from the statistical model of the trend in rates of positive nose and throat swab results for the latest week. All estimates are subject to uncertainty given that a sample is only part of the wider population.
The modelled estimates are more suited to understanding the recent trend. This is because the model is regularly updated to include new test results and smooths the trend over time. As swabs are not necessarily analysed in date order by the laboratory, we have not yet received test results for all swabs taken on the dates included in this analysis. Therefore, caution should be taken in over-interpreting small movements in the very latest trends. These modelled estimates can be found in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey datasets.
More about coronavirus
- Find the latest on coronavirus (COVID-19) in the UK.
- Explore the latest coronavirus data from the ONS and other sources.
- All ONS analysis, summarised in our coronavirus latest insights.
- View all coronavirus data.
3. COVID-19 by UK regions
In the week ending 13 July 2022, the percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase in the North West, East of England, London and the South East and the trend was uncertain in all other regions of England.
Figure 2: The percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase in the North West, East of England, London, and the South East in the week ending 13 July 2022
Modelled daily percentage of the population testing positive for COVID-19 on nose and throat swabs by region, England, 2 June to 13 July 2022
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Notes:
- Credible intervals widen slightly at the end as there is a delay between the swab being taken and reporting of results. We report latest figures based on the reference day for that week because of this greater uncertainty in the most recent days.
- There is a higher degree of uncertainty in our estimates for English regions compared with England overall, shown by wider credible intervals.
- The percentage of people testing positive by region was calculated using a similar modelling approach to the national daily estimates in Section 2: COVID-19 by UK countries.
- The analysis is conducted over a six-week period, which means some positive cases move in and out of the sample. This causes variability between estimates over time, which is expected given the lower number of positive tests in each region, compared with England as a whole.
- We describe trends by comparing the probability that the estimate for the reference day is higher or lower than the estimate for 7 and 14 days prior.
Download the data
Back to table of contents4. COVID-19 by age
Age group analysis for England
Our age groups separate children and young people by school age.
In the week ending 13 July 2022, the percentage of people testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) in England continued to increase for those in school Year 7 to school Year 11, aged 50 to 69 years and aged 70 years and over. In the same week, the trend was uncertain for all other age groups. Caution should be taken in over-interpreting any small movements in the latest trend.
Figure 3: In England, the percentage testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) continued to increase for those in school Year 7 to 11 and those aged 50 years and over in the week ending 13 July 2022
Modelled daily percentage of the population testing positive for COVID-19 on nose and throat swabs by age group, England, 2 June to 13 July 2022
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Notes:
- Credible intervals widen slightly at the end as there can be a delay between the swab being taken and reporting of results. We report latest figures based on the reference day for that week because of this greater uncertainty in the most recent days.
- There is a higher degree of uncertainty in our estimates for each age group in England compared with England overall. This is shown by wider credible intervals.
Download the data
We are unable to produce the same grouped analysis as presented in Figure 3 for the devolved administrations because of smaller sample sizes within each age group.
Age analysis by single year of age over time by country
We have not included our single year of age analysis this week. While we transition to our new digital data collection method, we will review whether we include our single year of age analysis on a weekly basis based on the quality of the data. The most recent updates for these outputs are available in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey datasets.
Back to table of contents6. Test sensitivity and specificity
The estimates provided in Sections 2 to 4 are for the percentage of the private-residential population testing positive for coronavirus (COVID-19), otherwise known as the positivity rate. We do not report the prevalence rate. To calculate the prevalence rate, we would need an accurate understanding of the swab test's sensitivity (true-positive rate) and specificity (true-negative rate).
While we do not know the true sensitivity and specificity of the test, our data and related studies provide an indication of what these are likely to be. In particular, the data suggest that the false-positive rate is very low - under 0.005%. We do not know the sensitivity of the swab test. However, other studies suggest that sensitivity (the rate of true-positive test results) may be somewhere between 85% and 98%.
You can find more information on sensitivity and specificity in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey methods article and our blog that explains why we trust the data from the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey. You can find more information on the data suggesting that our test's false-positive rate is very low in a paper written by academic partners at the University of Oxford.
Back to table of contents8. Collaboration
The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey analysis was produced by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in collaboration with our research partners at the University of Oxford, the University of Manchester, UK Health Security Agency (UK HSA) and Wellcome Trust. Of particular note are:
- Sarah Walker - University of Oxford, Nuffield Department for Medicine: Professor of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology and Study Chief Investigator
- Koen Pouwels - University of Oxford, Health Economics Research Centre, Nuffield Department of Population Health: Senior Researcher in Biostatistics and Health Economics
- Thomas House - University of Manchester, Department of Mathematics: Reader in Mathematical Statistics
- Anna Seale - University of Warwick, Warwick Medical School: Professor of Public Health; UK Health Security Agency, Data, Analytics and Surveillance: Scientific Advisor
9. Glossary
Age groups for children and young people
- "Aged 2 years to school Year 6" includes children in primary school and below
- "school Year 7 to school Year 11" includes children in secondary school
- "school Year 12 to those aged 24 years" includes young adults who may be in further or higher education
Those aged 11 to 12 years and those aged 16 to 17 years have been split between different age categories depending on whether their birthday is before or after 1 September.
Confidence interval
A confidence interval gives an indication of the degree of uncertainty of an estimate, showing the precision of a sample estimate. The 95% confidence intervals are calculated so that if we repeated the study many times, 95% of the time the true unknown value would lie between the lower and upper confidence limits. A wider interval indicates more uncertainty in the estimate. Overlapping confidence intervals indicate that there may not be a true difference between two estimates. For more information, see our methodology page on statistical uncertainty.
Credible interval
A credible interval gives an indication of the uncertainty of an estimate from data analysis. The 95% credible intervals are calculated so that there is a 95% probability of the true value lying in the interval. A wider interval indicates more uncertainty in the estimate. Overlapping credible intervals indicate that there may not be a true difference between two estimates. For more information, see our methodology page on statistical uncertainty.
Cycle threshold (Ct) values
The strength of a positive coronavirus (COVID-19) test is determined by how quickly the virus is detected, measured by a cycle threshold (Ct) value. The lower the Ct value, the higher the viral load and stronger the positive test. Positive results with a high Ct value can be seen in the early stages of infection when virus levels are rising, or late in the infection, when the risk of transmission is low.
False-positives and false-negatives
A false-positive result occurs when the tests suggest a person has COVID-19 when in fact they do not. By contrast, a false-negative result occurs when the tests suggest a person does not have COVID-19 when in fact they do. For more information on false-positives and false-negatives, see Section 11: Strengths and limitations.
Incidence rate
The incidence rate is a measure of the estimated number of new polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-positive cases per day per 10,000 people at a given point in time. It is different to positivity, which is an estimate of all current PCR positive cases at a point in time, regardless of whether the infection is new or existing.
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10. Measuring the data
Weighted estimates
In earlier publications we published weighted estimates for non-overlapping 14-day periods. These were additional to our modelled estimates, which are updated more regularly as test results are received and provide the best measure of trends. The weighted estimates were last updated in our publication on 13 May 2022. For more information on our methods and quality surrounding the estimates please see our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey methods article and our Quality and Methodology Information (QMI) report.
Reference dates
We aim to provide the estimates of positivity rate (the percentage of those who test positive) and incidence that are most timely and most representative of each week. We decide the most recent week we can report on based on the availability of test results for visits that have already happened, accounting for the fact that swabs have to be couriered to the labs, tested and results returned. On most occasions, the reference dates align perfectly, but sometimes this is not feasible. This week, the reference week is 7 to 13 July 2022 for England and Wales, and 8 to 14 July 2022 for Northern Ireland and Scotland.
Within the most recent week, we provide an official estimate for positivity rate based on a reference point from the modelled trends. For positivity rates, we can include all swab test results, even from the most recent visits. Therefore, although we are still expecting further swab test results from the labs, there were sufficient data for the official estimate for infection to be based on a reference point after the start of the reference week. To improve stability in our modelling while maintaining relative timeliness of our estimates, we are reporting our official estimates based on the midpoint of the reference week. This week, the reference day for positivity rates is Sunday 10 July 2022 for England and Wales, and Monday 11 July 2022 for Northern Ireland and Scotland.
Response rates
Enrolment for this wave of recruitment for the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey ceased on 31 January 2022. Response rates for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland can be regarded as final response rates to the survey. Response rates for each nation are found in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey: technical dataset. We provide response rates separately for the different sampling phases of the study. Additional information on response rates can be found in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey methods article.
Inconclusive and failed tests
Our estimates are based on confirmed positive test results. The remaining swabs are either negative and included in analysis, or inconclusive and not included in analysis. Some swabs are test failures, which also are not included in analysis. The impact of excluding inconclusive results from our estimates of positive infections is likely to be very small and unlikely to affect the trend.
Survey fieldwork
Survey fieldwork for the pilot study began in England on 26 April 2020. In Wales, fieldwork began on 29 June 2020, in Northern Ireland fieldwork began on 26 July 2020 and in Scotland fieldwork began on 21 September 2020.
Other Coronavirus Infection Survey (CIS) analysis and studies
This study provides the main measure of coronavirus infection in the UK. Other sources have provided data during previous stages of the pandemic. For information on other studies see Section 5: Quality characteristics of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey (coherence and comparability) of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey QMI, revised 16 July 2021.
Back to table of contents11. Strengths and limitations
The data in this bulletin can be used for:
- estimating the number of positive cases among the population living in private households, including cases where people do not report having any symptoms
- identifying differences in numbers of positive cases between UK countries and different regions in England
- estimating the number of new cases and change in positive cases over time
The data cannot be used for:
- measuring the number of cases and infections in care homes, hospitals and/or other communal establishments
- providing information about recovery time of those infected
The results in this bulletin are:
- based on infections occurring in private households
- subject to uncertainty; a credible or confidence interval gives an indication of the uncertainty of an estimate from data analysis
- for daily modelled estimates, provisional and subject to revision
These statistics have been produced quickly in response to developing world events. The Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR), on behalf of the UK Statistics Authority, has reviewed them on 14 May 2020 and 17 March 2021 against several important aspects of the Code of Practice for Statistics and regards them as consistent with the Code's pillars of trustworthiness, quality and value.
The estimates presented in this bulletin contain uncertainty. There are many sources of uncertainty, including uncertainty in the test, in the estimates and in the quality of data collected in the questionnaire. Information on the main sources of uncertainty is presented in our Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey Quality and Methodology Information report, our methodology article, and our blog that explains why we trust the data from the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey.
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