Skip to main content

This is a new service - your feedback will help us to improve it.

COVID-19 deaths data will be published next week

There will be a delay to the publication of the COVID-19 deaths data because of the Easter bank holidays. The Office of National Statistics (ONS) will publish the latest data on Friday 25 April. As a result, the data will appear on the dashboard on 1 May.

BackEntry title:

Scarlet fever GP in-hours daily consultation rate baseline

Last updated on Thursday, 17 April 2025 at 03:27pm

Summary

Topic
Scarlet-fever
Category
syndromic
API name
scarlet-fever_syndromic_GPInHours_baselineRateByDay

Rationale

Monitoring trends in daily GP in-hours consultation rates can provide an early warning of human public health threats and provide detail to inform public health action. Statistical baselines help us assess the current level and trend of GP in hours consultation rates, compared to historical expectations.

Definition

The metric reports the statistical baseline for seasonally expected daily GP in-hours consultation rates per 100,000 people, for scarlet fever at participating GP practices in England.

Methodology

The statistical baseline is constructed from historical data since August 2016, taking account of any known substantial changes in data collection, population coverage or reporting practices. The COVID-19 pandemic period is excluded.

Scarlet fever is identified from the diagnoses recorded during GP in-hours consultations. The diagnoses are based on signs and or symptoms and may not be lab confirmed.

The data presented are based on a sentinel syndromic surveillance system, not all GP practices in England are included. We receive an automated feed of anonymised GP in-hours consultation data from participating practices from 2 sources: The Phoenix Partnership (TPP) and Oxford Royal College of General Practitioners Clinical Informatics Digital Hub (ORCHID).

Caveats

Changes to national advice and guidance on access to healthcare services means trends should be treated with caution. The COVID-19 pandemic also involved updates and changes to service provision.

Not all GP practices in England are included in the data and coverage varies by location.

Back to top