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UK’s COVID-19 infections hit record high as free tests end

Rates of COVID-19 infection have hit a record high in the UK, official data showed Friday, just as free government testing ended for millions in England.
Some 4.9 million people in the UK are estimated to have had COVID-19 in the week ending March 26, or 600,000 more than the previous week, the latest survey by the Office for National Statistics said.
It said one in 13 people in England are estimated to have had COVID-19 during that week, up from one in 16 the week before.
The rate in Scotland was higher still, at one in 12.
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“The rapid rise continues to be fueled by the growth of the omicron BA.2 variant across the UK,” ONS senior statistician Kara Steel said.
Tim Spector, a professor of epidemiology at King’s College London, told Times Radio the timing of the government’s end of free testing in England “couldn't really be worse.”
From Friday, most people in England have to pay for their own lateral-flow test kits for COVID-19. Free testing will only be available in healthcare settings.
General free tests will continue for now in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which set their own health policy.
The Alzheimer’s Society has been campaigning to keep tests free for all people visiting their relatives in English care homes.
“With the end of COVID-19 rules, people may well assume infections are dwindling,” said James White, the charity’s head of public affairs.
“But the reality is that cases have been soaring, which means scrapping all isolation rules and ending free tests is a dangerous gamble.”
However, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said people must “learn to live with COVID-19.”
“We are one of the most open and free countries in the world now, and that’s because of decisions that we’ve taken as a country,” he said, after England’s last legal curbs were lifted in February.
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