KEY POINTS
  • The closely watched REACT-1 study, led by Imperial College London, warned that health services would remain under "extreme pressure" and the cumulative number of deaths would increase rapidly unless the prevalence of the virus in the community was reduced substantially.
  • It comes shortly after the U.K. recorded another all-time high of coronavirus deaths.
  • "These findings show why we must not let down our guard over the weeks to come," Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.
Medics take a patient from an ambulance into the Royal London hospital in London on January 19, 2021.

LONDON — A third national lockdown in England appears to have had little impact on the rising rate of coronavirus infections, according to the findings of a major study, with "no evidence of decline" in the prevalence of the virus during the first 10 days of tougher restrictions.

The closely watched REACT-1 study, led by Imperial College London, warned that health services would remain under "extreme pressure" and the cumulative number of deaths would increase rapidly unless the prevalence of the virus in the community was reduced substantially.