Almost 7,000 'pinged' by Covid app and told to self-isolate in Cornwall in a week
The figures have been revealed as Wales confirmed it will end quarantine rules for those who have been fully vaccinated
Nearly 7,000 people in Cornwall were contacted by the NHS Covid-19 app and told to isolate in the latest week, figures reveal.
The app warns people that they have been in close contact with someone who has tested positive for coronavirus.
People contacted through the app are advised to isolate for up to 10 days, although there is no legal obligation to do so.
NHS figures show 6,936 people in Cornwall were "pinged" by the Covid app in the week to July 21st – the latest available data.
That was an increase from the 5,606 alerts sent out the week before.
Across England and Wales, nearly 700,000 alerts were sent to Covid app users in the latest seven-day period – a record high and 11% more than the previous week.
Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick has urged people to isolate if they are advised to do so, saying there “isn’t very long to go” until August 16th, when all fully vaccinated contacts in England who test negative can avoid isolation.
He said: “I appreciate that it is a significant number of people and it can be frustrating, but the app is doing what we asked of it".
It comes as Wales confirms it will end quarantine rules for those people who have had both coronavirus vaccines next Saturday - nine days ahead of England.
The government is under pressure to bring our date forward.
But while isolation is not mandatory for people “pinged” by the Covid app in England, anyone who is contacted and told to self-isolate by the NHS Test and Trace service has a legal obligation to do so.
Separate Department for Health and Social Care figures, which cover larger council areas, show contact tracers told 4,827 people in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly to self-isolate after being in contact with someone who tested positive for Covid-19 in the week to July 21st.
That was up from 2,955 the week before.
Contact tracers ask new patients to give details for anyone they were in close contact with in the 48 hours before their symptoms started.
The figures show 5,556 people who came into close contact with someone who tested positive for Covid-19 in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly were transferred to Test and Trace in the latest week.
It means 729 contacts were not reached by the service. The figures do not include those told to isolate in specific settings such as schools and prisons.
Across England, more than 295,000 cases were transferred to the contact tracing system between July 15th and 21st, with 597,000 people identified as coming into close contact with someone who had tested positive.
The Government said it was expanding its daily contact testing for frontline sectors who are exempt from isolation.
Around 260 sites across the country are available for people working in prisons, waste collection, defence, the food industry, transport, Border Force and police and fire services.
A further 800 are in the process of being set up, with 1,200 more due to be established in the coming days.
Daily negative test results will enable eligible workers who have been alerted by the NHS Covid-19 app or called by NHS Test and Trace as coronavirus contacts to continue working.
Plans to allow fully-vaccinated travellers from the EU and the US to enter the UK without the need to self-isolate for two weeks have also been announced.
You can check the latest 'ping' figures for Cornwall and the UK here.