Coronavirus: how Britain became Europe’s worst-hit country
- At more than 32,000 deaths, nation now has more fatalities than Italy, and trails only the United States
- Overall British response to Covid-19 pandemic has been slammed as ‘biggest science policy failure in a generation’

Britain now has the world’s second highest cumulative coronavirus death toll, behind only the United States, after updated official figures released on Tuesday showed it had surpassed Italy in pandemic-related fatalities.
The grim milestone seemed unthinkable just two months ago, when the country recorded its first death and Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it was “extremely well prepared [for] all eventualities”.
Britain’s toll has jumped dramatically on several occasions as the Office for National Statistics (ONS) – which tallies all deaths, including those from the virus outside hospital – has updated the count.
It releases weekly updates for periods up to two weeks prior and, alongside updated numbers from health agencies in Britain’s devolved regions, showed 32,313 deaths from the virus. That compares with nearly 68,700 who have died in the United States and more than 29,000 in Italy.

The government’s chief scientific adviser Patrick Vallance had said that limiting Britain’s toll to 20,000 would be “a good outcome”.