With coronavirus cases in Greater Manchester falling rapidly, there’s hope we could escape Tier 3 next week, although it looks like London and Essex could be moving up into the highest tier. The government is set to re-assess the tiers on Wednesday, December 16th, and it looks like Greater Manchester could escape the toughest restrictions for the first time in months. The Mirror conducted an analysis of coronavirus rates since November 26th, and have found which places could be moving up or down due to changes in the numbers.
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Like Greater Manchester, infection rates are dropping in lots of Tier 3 areas, including Hull, Birmingham, and West Yorkshire, raising hopes more areas will be able to drop down into Tier 2 – however, it’s not clear by how much rates need to fall in order to move down a tier. Andy Burnham said yesterday that while there has been a ‘significant decline’ in hospital admissions across Greater Manchester, the infection rates are varying in different areas, with cases in Bury actually growing by 5% (to 225.7 per 100,000), while in Trafford they’ve dropped down into double digits (81.5 per 100,000).
In other Tier 3 areas, Kent is likely to remain under the toughest restrictions as rates continue to rise there, with Lincolnshire in the same position, and it looks like London and Essex could be joining them in Tier 3.
Like in Greater Manchester, London has seen a variation in infection levels across the city, with places like Camden and Richmond having relatively low rates, while Waltham Forest and Havering have seen high levels.
Colin and Kim Hansen / Wikimedia
The top ten areas with the highest rates include six in Kent, two in Lincolnshire and one each in Essex and London, with Swale in Kent currently having the nation’s highest rates (619.7 cases per 100,000), followed by Medway (602.4).
But the overall rate is only one measure the government looks at when considering tiers, they also consider the number of hospital beds an area has and the prevalence of the virus – specifically in the over-60s. Here’s a breakdown of the rates in different areas of England, courtesy of the Mirror’s analysis.
The places where rates have increased in Tier 2:
Essex
Basildon, 433.8, (812), 275.1, (515)
Brentwood, 281.7, (217), 199.9, (154)
Thurrock, 252.4, (440), 216.2, (377)
Epping Forest, 249.1, (328), 221.0, (291)
London
Havering, 378.7, (983), 337.5, (876)
Waltham Forest, 316.6, (877), 217.3, (602)
Barking and Dagenham, 310.9, 261.6, (557)
Newham, 263.9, (932), 223.1, (788)
Bexley, 259.8, (645), 227.2, (564)
Surrey
Runnymede, 284.0, (254), 191.2, (171)
Woking, 218.3, (220), 193.5, 146.8, (148)
Hertfordshire
Broxbourne, 264.2, (257), 196.3, (191)
Watford, 199.8, (193), 164.6, (159)
Hertsmere, 158.2, (166), 146.8, (154)
East Hertfordshire, 146.2, (219), 128.2, (192)
North Hertfordshire, 100.3, (134), 96.6, (129)
East Midlands
Rutland, 97.7, (39), 47.6, (19)
North West
Barrow-in-Furness, 123.8, (83), 102.9, (69)
Buckinghamshire
Milton Keynes, 182.2, (491), 167.0, (450)
Aylesbury Vale, 160.4, (320), 132.4, (264)
High Wycombe, 151.2, (264), 139.1, (243)
The places where rates have decreased in Tier 2:
Liverpool City Region
St Helens, 129.6, (234), 170.6, (308)
Liverpool, 88.1, (439), 147.2, (733)
Wirral, 57.1, (185), 112.3, (364)
Worcestershire
Worcester, 82.0, 153.1, (155)
Malvern Hills, 61.0, 87.7, (69)
Norfolk
Norwich, 121.6, (171), 140.9, (198)
South Norfolk, 109.3, (154), 137.7, (194)
Northamptonshire
Northampton, 197.2, (443), 227.1, (510)
South Northamptonshire, 113.2, (107), 201.1, (190)
Corby, 101.1, (73), 164.8, (119)
North West
Carlisle, 78.2, (85), 233.7, (254)
Warrington, 120.9, (254), 187.1, (393)
Cheshire East, 103.1, (396), 164.8, (633)
Cheshire West and Chester, 100.9, (346), 168.2, (577)
Suffolk
Ipswich, 160.7, (220), 161.4, (221)
East Suffolk, 61.7, (154), 71.4, (178)
West Suffolk, 53.6, (96), 60.9, (109)
The places where rates have increased in Tier 3:
Kent
Swale, 619.7, (930), 532.4, (799)
Medway, 602.4, (1,678), 442.3, (1,232)
Gravesham, 423.6, (453), 392.7, (420)
Thanet, 419.9, (596), 478.4, (679)
Maidstone, 409.1, (703), 277.0, (476)
The places where rates have decreased in Tier 3:
East Yorkshire
Hull, 200.9, (522), 460.0, (1195)
East Riding of Yorkshire, 147.4, (503), 278.5, (950)
Greater Manchester
Oldham, 153.5, (364), 366.9, (870)
Rochdale, 215.4, (479), 342.2, (761)
Wigan, 187.1, (615), 301.2, (990)
Manchester, 169.8, (939), 245.3, (1,356)
Trafford, 85.1 (202), 169.4 (402)
Bury 225.7 (431), 300.5 (574)
Lincolnshire
Boston, 387.6, (272), 438.9, (308)
Lincoln, 329.3, (327), 391.7, (389)
East Lindsey, 176.4, (250), 429.0, (608)
North Lincolnshire, 174.1, (300), 341.3, (588)
North East Lincolnshire, 153.5, (245), 372.9, (595)
North East
Hartlepool, 222.1, (208), 364.1, (341)
South Tyneside, 205.3, (310), 336.5, (508)
Middlesbrough, 180.9, (255), 309.3, (436)
Sunderland, 162.8, (452), 275.8, (766)
Newcastle upon Tyne, 113.9, (345), 300.8, (911)
Staffordshire
Stoke-on-Trent, 321.8, (825), 419.3, (1,075)
Newcastle-under-Lyme, 204.0, (264), 407.1, (527)
East Staffordshire, 220.5, (264), 362.4, (434)
West Midlands
Sandwell, 211.3, (694), 406.5, (1,335)
Wolverhampton, 243.4, (641), 343.6, (905)
Birmingham, 191.4, (2,186), 339.8, (3,880)
Walsall, 194.4, (555), 320.2, (914)
Warwickshire
Coventry 129.5 (481), 200.5 (745)
Rugby 105.6 (115), 212 (231)
West Yorkshire
Bradford, 192.7, (1,040), 362.9, (1,959)
Calderdale, 192.0, (406), 306.4, (648)
Kirklees, 182.6, (803), 373.6 (1,643)
Leeds, 142.5, (1130), 266.3, (2,112),
South Yorkshire
Doncaster, 214.2, (668), 245.3, (765)
Rotherham, 184.6, (490), 232.1, (616)
Barnsley, 139.8, (345), 256.8, (634)
Sheffield, 131.1, (767), 223.6, (1,308)
Lancashire
Pendle, 286.6, (264), 311.6, (287)
Blackburn with Darwen, 263.2, (394), 335.3, (502)
Burnley, 247.4, (220), 356.5, (317)
Rossendale, 226.6, (162), 303.6, (217)
Hyndburn, 169.0, (137), 407.2, (330)
Blackpool, 147.7, (206), 205.1, (286)
East Midlands
Nottingham, 152.0, (506), 196.8, (655)
Bassetlaw, 256.3, (301), 290.3, (341)
Derby, 144.6, (372), 260.8, (671)
Leicestershire
Oadby and Wigston, 301.7, (172), 413.9, (236)
Leicester, 245.6, (870), 383.4, (1,358)
Blaby, 203.9, (207), 346.7, (352)
North West Leicestershire, 113.9, (118), 279.9, (290)
South West
South Gloucestershire, 136.4, (389), 212.2, (605)
Bristol, 126.7, (587), 300.4, (1,392)
North Somerset, 113.9, (245), 204.6, (440)
South East
Slough, 238.7, (357), 323.0, (483)
The above numbers are based on two different testing programmes, both tests in laboratories (pillar one) and tests in the wider community (pillar two), and the figure is the number of new cases per 100,000 people.