The number of coronavirus cases in South Lakeland increased by 132 in the last 24 hours, official figures show – and one more death was recorded.

A total of 20,233 people had been confirmed as testing positive for Covid-19 in South Lakeland when the UK coronavirus daily dashboard was updated on January 26 (Wednesday), up from 20,101 on Tuesday.

The rate of infection in South Lakeland now stands at 19,287 cases per 100,000 people, far lower than the England average of 24,284.

Across the UK, the number of recorded cases increased by 101,603 over the period, to 16,149,319.

People with a positive lateral flow test no longer need to take a follow-up PCR test to confirm the result unless they have coronavirus symptoms.

UK case numbers currently only include LFT results for England and Northern Ireland, with lateral flow testing data for Scotland due to be added in the coming weeks.

There was also one more coronavirus death recorded in the latest 24-hour period in South Lakeland.

The dashboard shows 264 people had died in the area by January 26 (Wednesday) – up from 263 on Tuesday.

It means there have been seven deaths in the past week, which is a decrease on eight the previous week.

They were among 21,831 deaths recorded across the North West.

The figures include anyone who died within 28 days of a positive test result for Covid-19, and whose usual residence was in South Lakeland.

Daily death counts are revised each day, with each case backdated to the actual date of death.

The figures also show that nearly nine in 10 people in South Lakeland have received two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine.

The latest figures show 83,171 people had received both jabs by January 25 (Tuesday) – 85% of those aged 12 and over, based on the number of people on the National Immunisation Management Service database.

Across England, 84% of people aged 12 and above had received a second dose of the jab.

Unlike at local level, the national rate was calculated using mid-2020 population estimates from the Office for National Statistics.