Another 449 patients have died in hospitals in the UK after contracting coronavirus.

The Department of Health said a total of 16,509 people diagnosed with COVID-19 - the disease caused by coronavirus - have lost their lives across the four home nations.

The figure does not include deaths in the community, including in care homes.

NHS England announced another 449 deaths in hospitals in England, taking the country's overall number of fatalities to 14,829.

Scotland saw a further 12 deaths, Wales nine and Northern Ireland 13.


Health authorities in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland record their own daily figures, which may not tally with the government's total as they collate their numbers at different times throughout the day.

According to each home nation's health authorities, the number of deaths in hospitals now stands at:

England - 14,829

Scotland - 915

Wales - 584

Northern Ireland - 207

The number of coronavirus-related deaths announced so far by University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust has reached 600 - the highest number for any trust in England.

It is the number of deaths announced by the trust as of 5pm on April 19, according to figures from NHS England.

Four other trusts have announced between 300 and 400 deaths: the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust (387), London North West University Healthcare NHS Trust (382), King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (322) and Barts Health NHS Trust (309).

A further 11 trusts have announced between 200 and 300 deaths.

It comes as the government's furlough scheme opened for applications.

Through the Job Retention Scheme, employers can claim for a cash grant to cover up to 80% of their staff's wages - capped at £2,500 a month.

More than 140,000 firms have applied to the scheme since it launched on Monday morning, the chancellor has said.

Speaking at the daily Downing Street briefing, Rishi Sunak announced the grants to help cover the wages of more than one million people.

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The government has also called claims in the Sunday Times that they "lost a crucial five weeks" to tackle the threat posed by the coronavirus as "plainly untrue" and "ridiculous".

However, former Labour prime minister Tony Blair told Sky News Boris Johnson's government was "probably slow" in its early response to the crisis.

He also said he "can't see any way out" of the COVID-19 lockdown without mass testing of the public.