Transparency data

Weekly statistics for rapid asymptomatic testing in England: 8 April to 14 April 2021

Updated 23 April 2021

Applies to England

This week figures for LFD tests reported by NHS staff and confirmatory PCR test results for secondary school students are included in this publication for the first time.

Introduction

This statistical publication aims to provide information on rapid testing for people without COVID-19 symptoms in England. This includes:

  • the number of LFD tests conducted by test result
  • the number of LFD tests conducted by region
  • the number of LFD tests conducted education settings
  • the number of LFD and PCR tests conducted in care homes
  • the number of LFD tests conducted by NHS staff

This publication focuses on rapid testing using lateral flow device (LFD) tests, however polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests are included where appropriate, either for comparison or where regular asymptomatic PCR testing is used. All data used in the report can be found in the ‘Tests conducted’ data tables on the weekly collection page. This includes information on both LFD and PCR tests at lower-tier local authority level.

The figures in this report are only deduplicated to report on the number of individual tests taken, not the number of people tested. Because people can have more than one test, the data should not be compared with prevalence or case positivity rates.

The figures in this report include LFD tests which were registered through the National Testing Programme digital infrastructure. They also now include the number of tests reported by secondary care NHS staff which were registered via a different route. They do not currently include a relatively small number of LFD tests conducted within private sector testing.

See the About this data section below for more information.

Background

Types of tests

PCR tests

PCR tests check for the genetic material of the coronavirus in the sample, which is taken using a swab and is processed in a lab via a polymerase chain reaction (PCR). This type of test is predominantly used for:

  • anyone who has symptoms
  • to confirm a positive LFD test result
  • regular asymptomatic testing in social care

Lateral flow device tests

LFD tests, often referred to as rapid tests, test for the presence of proteins called ‘antigens’ which are produced by the virus. They are swab tests that give results in 30 minutes or less, without the need for processing in a laboratory. These tests are primarily used for those who do not have symptoms.

From 21 October 2020, LFD tests were made available in limited capacity except where rapid testing pilots were conducted. Since then their availability has expanded, initially to a broader range of settings and from 9 April 2021 to everyone in England.

Prior to 27 January 2021, if an individual received a positive LFD test result they were required to take a PCR test to confirm this. Between 27 January and 29 March 2021 this was no longer a requirement except for those self-reporting their test result. From 30 March 2021 the requirement to take a confirmatory PCR test was reinstated for all positive LFD tests.

Rapid testing for people without symptoms

Rapid testing using LFD tests is currently being offered to people who do not have symptoms, in a range of different settings such as education providers, care homes and workplaces. In addition, anyone in England is now eligible for twice weekly LFD tests, see regular rapid coronavirus tests if you do not have symptoms guidance for more information.

Some LFD testing is carried out at asymptomatic test sites, which are deployed in a range of community settings such as universities, schools, care homes and workplaces. They are also set up by local authorities as part of the community testing programme. Testing at these sites is assisted: a person will take a swab test under the supervision of a trained operator who then processes the test then reads and records the result.

Some LFD testing is carried out entirely by individuals themselves (that is an individual takes their own test, unassisted, and reports their own result). For more information see understanding lateral flow tests for people without symptoms.

LFD tests conducted, England[footnote 1]

The number of LFD tests conducted has generally increased since their introduction in October 2020. Between 18 February and 17 March, the number of LFD tests conducted rose sharply peaking at just over 7.6 million, which coincides with return of secondary students to school. Following that peak, the number of LFD tests conducted reduced sharply in the week commencing 1 April, to just over 4 million. The reduction coincided with the end of spring term in schools. Since then, the number of LFD tests conducted has increased to 4,750,822 tests in the latest week (8 to 14 April 2021).

In comparison, 931,979 PCR tests were conducted in the latest week (8 to 14 April 2021). The number of PCR tests conducted continues to be lower than the number of LFD tests conducted. This reflects the increasing use of LFD tests, as well as a decrease in symptomatic people taking a PCR test due to decreasing COVID-19 prevalence.

PCR and LFD tests have different uses and are therefore applied in different situations (see the Types of tests section above for more information). The primary purpose of rapid LFD testing is to identify people with COVID-19 who do not have symptoms. As the number of LFD tests conducted increases, more asymptomatic positive cases are identified earlier and therefore they are less likely to transmit the virus to their contacts.

Of the LFD tests conducted in the latest week, 4,838 tests returned a positive result, and 4,740,397 tests returned a negative result. Since LFD tests were introduced, 139,409 positive results and 52,251,340 negative results have been reported.

Figure 1: number of LFD and PCR tests conducted, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_1’ and ‘table_3’ tabs of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

The total number of LFD tests conducted does not include tests taken by staff in NHS trusts as they report via a different route.

These figures are reported separately in the section for tests conducted by staff in NHS trusts below, and have an additional week’s time lag (because they are collated weekly by trusts). The data therefore cannot be combined on a weekly basis to give an overall total number of LFD tests conducted.

LFD tests conducted by region, England

The number of LFD tests conducted has increased across all regions in the latest week. This follows a decrease in the number of LFD tests conducted between 25 March and 17 April 2021 which coincided with the Easter holidays for schools. Between 8 April and 14 April 2021, the most LFD tests were conducted in the South East followed by the East of England.

Figure 2: LFD tests conducted by region, England[footnote 2]

This data can be found in the ‘table_4’ tab of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

LFD tests conducted in education settings, England

The rapid testing operation has been rolled out differently across the different education settings, as summarised in the table below. For more information see the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

Testing started Frequency Group tested
Primary schools, school-based nurseries and maintained nursery schools 18 January 2021 Twice a week Staff
Primary schools, school-based nurseries and maintained nursery schools 1 March 2021 Twice a week Households and bubbles of staff and students
Secondary schools and colleges 4 January 2021 Once a week then increased to twice a week Staff and students*
Secondary schools and colleges 8 March 2021 Three tests on return (spaced 3 to 5 days apart) then twice a week Students
Secondary schools and colleges 1 March 2021 Twice a week Households and bubbles of staff and students
Higher education 27 November 2020 Twice before leaving and twice on return Staff and students
Higher education 25 January 2021 Twice a week Staff and students

*Students in this time period only included children of critical workers and those in vulnerable groups who were currently attending school.

Between 27 January and 30 March 2021, staff, students, household bubbles and support bubbles who tested positive after using a home LFD test kit were required to take a confirmatory PCR test, and those who tested positive from an LFD test taken at an on-site test centre did not. From 30 March 2021, the requirement to take a confirmatory PCR test was reinstated for all positive LFD tests. For more information on the testing methods for the different phases of education see the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

LFD tests conducted by phase of education

The number of LFD tests conducted within primary schools, school-based nurseries and maintained nursery schools increased substantially between 14 January 2021 and the beginning of February to over 700,000 tests in a week. In the latest week, the number of tests conducted has increased to 764,893. 457 positive test results were returned in the latest week within primary schools and nurseries, a decrease from 761 positive results in the previous week.

Similarly, within secondary schools and colleges, the number of LFD tests conducted increased gradually since the week commencing 31 December 2020 to over 400,000 in the week commencing 4 February. In the latest week, the number of tests has increased to 2,053,872 compared to 1,930,590 in the previous week. This follows a peak in the number of secondary school and college tests between 11 March and 17 March which coincides with secondary school students taking 3 tests on their return to school and the decline between 24 March and 7 April coincides with the end of spring term. The increase in tests in the latest week coincides with the start of the summer term for schools. The number of positive test results has decreased to 1,359 positive results in the latest week.

The total number of LFD tests taken in secondary schools and colleges includes tests not registered. The full breakdown of tests registered and not registered in secondary schools and colleges is available in ‘table 6’ of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

58,213 LFD tests were conducted in the latest week in higher education, which is an increase from 32,896 tests in the previous week. The number of LFD tests conducted in higher education peaked between 3 December to 9 December 2020 which coincided with students getting tested to enable them to travel home for the winter break. 44 positive test results were returned in higher education in the latest week, an increase since the previous week.

The number of positive test results is not published as a proportion of the total tests conducted due to the data quality. In addition, because there are differences in the testing operation between the different phases of education, they cannot be directly compared. See the Data quality section below for more information.

Figure 3: number of LFD tests conducted in education, by phase of education, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_6’ tab of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

LFD tests conducted by secondary school students

Upon their return to school from 8 March, secondary school students were tested for COVID-19 at school-specific asymptomatic test sites (assisted), with each student asked to take 3 tests spaced 3 to 5 days apart. Those students who received a positive LFD test result were not asked to take a confirmatory PCR test. After these first 3 tests, students begin twice weekly LFD testing at home (self-reported), for which they are advised to take a confirmatory PCR test within 2 days if they receive a positive result.

In the latest week ending 14 April, 1,303,509 LFD tests were taken by students in secondary schools which is a slight increase from 1,236,969 tests in the previous week. This increase follows a decrease in tests seen in the previous weeks, this coincides with the Easter holidays and some students returning to school in the latest week.

In the latest week ending 14 April, 873 positive LFD tests were received by secondary school students, of which 9 were assisted at a test site and 864 were self-reported.[footnote 3] Of those which were self-reported, 354 were matched to a confirmatory PCR test and 237 received a subsequent positive PCR test result, 111 were negative and 6 were void. These figures therefore show that in the latest week 67% of positive LFD tests which could be matched to a confirmatory PCR test, subsequently received a positive PCR test result.

The number of LFD tests not matched to a confirmatory PCR test include those where a confirmatory PCR test was not taken within 3 days of the LFD test, or where the LFD test could not be matched to a PCR test in the data.

There are a number of possible reasons why the results of the initial LFD and the confirmatory PCR may be different:

  • issues in correctly reading or recording the result for LFDs, leading to reporting a positive result when it was negative

  • the initial LFD may have incorrectly returned a positive result, which occurs in less than 1 in 1,000 tests

  • the confirmatory PCR may have incorrectly returned a negative result which can occur if the sampling technique was poor. See more information on false negatives in PCR testing

  • the time delay between the taking of the 2 tests means that it is possible for an individual to have correctly tested positive when they took the LFD and then correctly negative when they took the PCR. Of all the confirmatory PCRs identified for self-reported LFDs, 85% were taken within one day of the LFD test meaning this is unlikely to be the reason for the negative confirmatory PCR test

The data presented here is in line with previously published analysis by NHS Test and Trace on lateral flow device specificity, which shows LFD tests have a specificity of at least 99.9%. This means that for every 1,000 lateral flow tests carried out, there is fewer than one false positive result. The number of false positives as a proportion of all positive results varies depending on the prevalence of COVID-19 within the populations being tested – the higher the level of prevalence, the lower the probability that a positive result will be a false positive. For more technical information on LFD tests and false positives see NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

The number positive LFD tests returned by secondary school students published by whether they were self-reported or assisted at an ATS site will not sum to the total number of LFD positives for secondary school students as published in table 7. This is because the two use different data sources and the data cuts were taken at lightly different times, however the production process is being improved to address this.

LFD tests conducted by staff, students, household bubbles and support bubbles

In the latest week 351,998 LFD tests were taken by staff in secondary schools, a decrease from the previous week. In comparison, 574,315 tests were taken by staff in primary schools, school-based nurseries and maintained nursery schools.

275,462 tests were taken by individuals that belong to a household bubble of a student or staff member at school or nursery and 32,936 were taken by individuals in their support bubbles. The number of tests conducted by household and support bubbles increased sharply for two weeks after they were first reported in the week commencing 4 March. In the past week, tests conducted by household and support bubbles has seen a decrease in comparison to the previous week.

Figure 4: number of LFD tests conducted by staff and students in secondary schools, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_7’ tab of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

Tests conducted and registered to care home settings, England

Asymptomatic testing, using both rapid LFD tests and PCR tests has been rolled out differently across different care home settings and their residents, staff and visitors, as summarised in the table below.

The number of tests conducted in care homes includes staff, residents and visitors tested via test kits directly sent to the care home which were registered. It will not include care home staff residents, or visitors who are tested via a different route, for example at a regional or local test site or a mobile testing unit or tests that were not registered.

For more information see the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

Dates Frequency Test kit
Care home residents 7 June 2020 to present Monthly
In the event of an outbreak: day 1 and between days 4 to 7
PCR
Care home residents 22 February 2021 to present In the event of an outbreak: day 1 and between days 4 to 7 at health protection team discretion LFD
Care home staff 7 June 2020 to present Weekly
In the event of an outbreak: day 1 and between days 4 to 7
PCR
Care home staff 23 December 2020 to present Twice weekly
In the event of a positive case in the care home: daily until 5 days without a positive
LFD
Care home indoor visitors 8 March 2021 to present Weekly: essential care givers PCR
Care home indoor visitors 8 March 2021 to present Twice weekly: essential care givers LFD
Care home indoor visitors 2 December 2020 to present* On arrival LFD
Care home visiting professionals – CQC inspectors 14 December 2020 to present Weekly PCR
Care home visiting professionals – CQC inspectors 22 March 2021 to present Before visit LFD
Care home visiting professionals – all other professionals 14 December 2020 to present On arrival, unless part of a regular testing regime and can provide proof of a negative result within last 72 hours LFD

*Close contact visits with LFD testing began on 2 December 2020 but ceased on 6 January 2021 because of the national lockdown. Throughout the period of national restrictions, visits were limited to outdoors, in visiting pods, or with a substantial screen; as well as those in exceptional circumstances such as end of life.

PCR and LFD tests conducted and registered to care home settings, England

The number of PCR tests conducted within care homes increased overall from 40,000 tests in the week commencing 25 June 2020 to over 550,000 tests in the week commencing 7 January 2021. Following 2 months of decreasing numbers of PCR tests, there has been an increase in the latest week (8 to 14 April) to 474,608, from 401,081 in the previous week (1 to 7 April).

The number of LFD tests conducted within care homes increased steeply from the week commencing 10 December 2020 to over 560,000 tests in the week commencing 4 February 2021. Following 2 months of decreasing LFD tests, there has been an increase in the latest week (8 to 14 April) to 529,566, from 492,290 in the previous week (1 to 7 April).

The week commencing 8 April 2021 was the twelfth successive week for which more LFD tests were conducted than PCR tests. Previously the number of PCR tests conducted had always been higher than LFD tests. This reflects the increasing use of LFD tests, as well as a decrease in symptomatic people taking a PCR test due to decreasing COVID-19 prevalence.

Of the LFD tests conducted in the latest week (8 to 14 April 2021), 305 tests returned a positive result, and 529,153 tests returned a negative result. Since LFD tests were introduced, 21,739 positive results and 7,278,941 negative results have been reported.

Figure 5: number of LFD and PCR tests conducted in care homes, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_9’ and ‘table_10’ tab of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

LFD testing in care homes by staff and residents

Between 8 April and 14 April, 6,404 LFD tests were conducted by care home residents, which has increased from 5,742 in the previous week.

Of these, 9 returned a positive result compared to 12 in the previous week, continuing the downward trend from the previous week. This is the thirteenth successive week of declining of positive test results.

Figure 6: number of LFD and PCR tests conducted by residents and staff in care homes, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_10’ tab of the ‘Tests conducted: 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

LFD testing in care homes by visitors and visiting professionals

In the latest week 10,813 LFD tests were taken by visiting professionals in care homes, in comparison with 52,695 tests taken by visitors. The number of tests conducted by visitors increased steeply from week commencing 11 March although the overall number of LFD tests decreased. This follows a change in the guidance on care home visits from 8 March.

LFD tests reported by NHS staff, England

Rapid asymptomatic testing by NHS staff began in November 2020 and has since expanded to include the following groups. All positive LFD test results in the NHS are followed up with a confirmatory PCR and contact tracing activities are trigged by the PCR test result.

Group tested Date Frequency
Staff in NHS trusts November 2020 Twice weekly
Staff in primary care December 2020 Twice weekly
NHS-commissioned services in the independent sector January 2021 Twice weekly

Staff in primary care and those in the independent sector delivering NHS services self-report their test result through the Test and Trace GOV.UK portal, whereas staff in NHS trusts report their results to their employer. The NHS trust then submits data for their staff to NHS Digital (formerly to PHE) which is separate to reporting through the National Testing Programme digital infrastructure. This separate reporting system was established this way because NHS secondary care providers began testing with LFD’s before an NHS Digital reporting solution for trusts was built; now it is available for them to use, these providers will be moving over to the specifically designed solution and will wind down the use of other systems. Because of this, the figures for NHS Trusts are not included in the national figures for the number of LFD tests conducted reported via this route. We report them separately here.

Staff in NHS trusts and services are able to access additional forms of testing along with lateral flow testing, including asymptomatic testing with PCR and LAMP (loop mediated isothermal amplification). NHS staff testing via these additional methods are not included in these figures.

The number of positive test results received by NHS staff is not published as a proportion of the total tests conducted because individuals test repeatedly and therefore cannot be compared with other testing regimes. See the data quality section for more information.

For more information see the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

LFD tests reported by NHS primary care staff

Primary care services provide the first point of contact in the healthcare system, acting as the ‘front door’ of the NHS. Primary care includes general practice, community pharmacy, dental and optometry (eye health) services.

The number of LFD tests reported by NHS primary care staff increased steadily between week commencing 7 January 2021 and week commencing 28 January to over 169,000 tests in a week. In the latest week, 131,145 LFD tests were reported by NHS primary care staff which has increased from 116,055 in the previous week. 55 positive test results were returned in the latest week by NHS primary care staff, an increase from 48 positive results in the previous week. Since LFD testing for primary care staff began, there have been a total of 2,279 positive test results.

LFD tests reported by staff in NHS trusts

NHS trusts include acute and specialist hospitals, community, mental health and learning disability and ambulance services. Staff in NHS trusts report their test results via their employer, which is separate to reporting through the National Testing Program digital infrastructure. These tests are therefore not included in the total number of LFD tests conducted reported earlier in the bulletin.

The data collection process is entirely dependent on NHS organisations submitting complete information on time, as a result there are some data quality issues associated with the data. The figures for LFD tests conducted by staff in NHS trusts are therefore only available as a cumulative total number of tests up to 24 March. From 25 March all NHS trusts reported weekly to NHS Digital and the figures are reported weekly from this point forwards. For more information see the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

The timing of the weekly process of submission by NHS trusts means that data for the latest week is not available. Figures for tests conducted by staff in NHS Trusts are therefore published with an additional week’s lag in comparison to the rest of the data in this publication.

From November 2020 to 24 March 2021 8,981,338 LFD tests have been reported by staff in NHS trusts. Of these, 45,264 tests were positive, 8,901,307 were negative and 34,762 were unknown or void. In the latest week ending 7 April, 374,496 LFD tests were reported by staff in NHS Trusts of which 252 were positive.

LFD tests reported by other NHS staff (including the independent sector)

The majority of tests reported by other NHS staff, include members of staff working in the independent sector who have also had access to twice weekly LFD testing. In the latest week ending 14 April, 18,226 tests were conducted by other NHS employees which is an increase from 15,516 tests in the previous week and 22 positive test results were received.

Within the NHS the majority of staff work in NHS trusts, followed by primary care and then the independent sector, hence testing volumes will reflect the number of staff working in each setting.

Figure 7: number of LFD tests reported by primary care NHS staff, staff in NHS trusts and other NHS staff, England

This data can be found in the ‘table_11’, ‘table_12’ and ‘table_13’ tabs of the ‘the ‘NHS Test and Trace statistics, 28 May 2020 to 14 April 2021 data tables’ on the weekly collection page.

About this data

Lateral flow device tests were first made available from 21 October 2020 in England. This data contains LFD tests reported through the existing National Testing Programme digital infrastructure and does not include LFD tests conducted where the tests were not registered via this route that is used to collect data for this report.

The following use cases for LFD tests are not currently reporting results digitally into Test and Trace systems, and therefore are excluded from this report:

  • testing for some staff in private sector industries
  • testing for some hauliers, these are published separately see haulier coronavirus testing

In these cases, test results should be reported directly into Public Health England. In future, all LFD tests will be reported via the existing National Testing Programme digital infrastructure and will be included.

A full explanation of the data sources and methods used to produce these statistics can be found in the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

Data quality

Given the importance of this service and the commitment of NHS Test and Trace to be open and transparent with the public it serves, this data is being released at the earliest possible opportunity. However, this data should be treated with caution whilst the understanding of the data and its quality improves.

An LFD test produces a result on the device almost immediately, without it being automatically recorded, therefore some results might not be captured. For settings where self-reporting LFD testing procedures[footnote 4] are in place, it is likely that the number of tests conducted are underreported. It is however their statutory duty to do so, and easier reporting tools are being rolled out to support these individuals to report their tests as quickly and efficiently as possible. It is possible that tests with a negative result are more likely to be affected, therefore it is not advisable to calculate a positivity rate with the data.

Positive test results are not published as a proportion of the total number of tests conducted. There are several reasons why it is not advisable to calculate a positivity rate with this data:

  • the number of tests conducted is not deduplicated and refers to the number of tests taken and not the number of people tested. Because people can have more than one test, the number of tests conducted therefore cannot be compared with prevalence or case positivity rates

  • rapid testing is primarily used for repeat testing of asymptomatic individuals and the frequency of testing varies across different settings, therefore positivity rates would not be directly comparable

  • the potential underreporting of tests conducted by individuals self-reporting is more likely to affect negative test results than positives thus skewing any positivity rate calculation

More information on data limitations and how the figures in this publication can and can’t be used is outlined in the NHS Test and Trace statistics methodology.

Future developments

We continue to explore the feasibility of adding new breakdowns to the publication on rapid testing to support user needs. Over the coming months, we intend to make data available on the following:

  • confirmatory PCR test results for all positive LFD tests

  • rapid testing in public and private industries

  • community testing programme

For feedback and any further questions, please contact statistics@dhsc.gov.uk.

  1. Counts of LFD tests conducted do not include tests which weren’t reported through the National Testing Program digital infrastructure. The majority of those not included are tests taken by staff in NHS trusts which are reported separately in the publication. 

  2. Absolute number of tests conducted in each region and does not take into consideration population of regions. 

  3. The number positive LFD tests returned by secondary school students published by whether they were self-reported or assisted at an ATS site will not sum to the total number of LFD positives for secondary school students as published in table 7. This is because the 2 use different data sources and the data cuts were taken at lightly different times, however the production process is being improved to address this. 

  4. Self-reporting LFDs are where the individual carrying out the test on themselves is expected to report their own test and subsequent result.