One in 20 people infected, with high rates in elderly people who are due a spring Covid booster vaccine.
Covid cases have continued to rise in the UK, with an estimated one in every 20 people infected, figures from the Office for National Statistic suggest.
All age groups are affected, including the over-75s, who are due a spring booster jab to top up protection.
Hospital cases are also rising, but vaccines are still helping to stop many severe cases, say experts.
An easily spread sub-variant of Omicron, called BA.2, is now causing most cases.
Recent easing of restrictions and waning immunity from the vaccines could be factors behind the rise too.
The ONS infection survey, which tests thousands of people randomly in households across the UK, estimates that 3.3 million people would have tested positive in the week ending 12 March – up from 2.6 million the previous week.
Scotland has seen infection levels rise for seven weeks in a row. They have now reached a new record high, with 376,300 people estimated to have had Covid last week, or one in 14.
Infection rates across the nations were:
- England: 4.9%, up from 3.8% last week – approximately one in 25 people
- Wales: 4.1%, up from 3.2% last week – approximately one in 25 people
- Northern Ireland: 7.1% , down from 7.8% last week – approximately one in 14 people
- Scotland: 7.15% up from 5.7% last week – approximately one in 14 people
It comes as the UK continues to lift previous Covid restrictions. As of Friday, people arriving in the UK will no longer need to take a Covid test, even if they haven’t been vaccinated.
It is part of the government’s Living with Covid strategy that relies on personal responsibility and mass vaccination to protect the public, rather than laws and limits on what people are allowed to do.
Scotland’s rules on face coverings in shops and on public transport will, however, remain in place until April due to the rise in Covid.
Sarah Crofts, head of analytical outputs for the Covid-19 Infection Survey, said Scotland was showing the highest level of infections yet.
“It’s notable also that infections have risen in all age groups, with the over-70s reaching their highest estimate since our survey began,” she added.
Prof James Naismith, Director of the Rosalind Franklin Institute, and Professor of Structural Biology, University of Oxford, said the high infection rates around the UK currently, with few Covid restrictions, meant that almost anyone could catch the virus.
He said: “My main concern is for the vulnerable for whom this disease is serious.
“Every effort must be made to triple vaccinate as many people as possible, quadruple vaccinate the most vulnerable.”
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