The NHS Test and Trace has reached over 272,000 people since its launch in May, helping to stop hundreds of thousands of people at risk of unknowingly passing the virus on, latest data showed.
According to the data from the eleventh week of operation (6 -12 August), the service has reached 88.6 per cent of close contacts where communication details have been provided or 81 per cent of close contacts overall
Dedicated teams of contact tracers from NHS Test and Trace are working with local authorities across England to reach contacts in communities who have not responded to the service, especially where there is high prevalence of the virus.
New areas have signed up to the scheme, with teams now in place in Leicester, Blackburn with Darwen, Luton, Sandwell, Rochdale, Peterborough and Oldham, with work ongoing to expand quickly to more areas.
Almost four million people have been tested during the 11 week period, with the vast majority of tests conducted at in-person test sites, with results delivered the next day.
Many of the most vulnerable, such as staff and residents in care homes, have received multiple tests and the number of outbreaks and complex cases in these settings remains low.
Since mid-June the number of people getting newly tested has increased by 52 per cent with over 431,000 people newly tested in the latest week of statistics.
Baroness Dido Harding, interim executive chair of the National Institute for Health Protection, said: “NHS Test and Trace is consistently reaching tens of thousands of people each week who are at risk of unknowingly spreading the virus. The system is there for us all. Testing and contact tracing will help us control this virus, but only with your support.
“I am hugely grateful to everyone who’s stepped up so far and especially to everyone working tirelessly in communities around the country to ensure that no one is left behind.”
NHS Test and Trace is also finding more people who have the virus, with 6,616 people testing positive in the last week which is a 27 per cent increase from the week before.
This is likely due to an increase in hyper-local testing in areas where infection levels have been rising.
Last week eight new local walk-through testing sites were opened, including in Newcastle upon Tyne, Trafford in Greater Manchester, Bristol and Southend-on-Sea.
It means there are now over 130 testing sites, including 38 walk-throughs, as well as 236 mobile units, and work is ongoing to increase the number of labs processing test samples. The latest Lighthouse Lab to be added to the network in Newport is currently being constructed to provide additional capacity.