Government officials have warned that stricter social distancing measures are set to happen from next month.
These measures are set to happen within three weeks when it is predicted that the UK would have reached its peak, to further reduce “person-to-person interaction.”
A senior government advisor said the numbers of infected people and deaths will continue to rise, for at least the next three weeks, with the peak hitting Easter.
The advisor said hospitals “should be ok” but said “we can’t guarantee it” as some hospitals intensive care units (ICU) could start to be overwhelmed.
If the number of deaths see a significant rise, then the government will role out “greater enforcement” over social distancing measures.
The government advisor told the Mail Online, they will do “anything that can be done to push” the virus down “further.”
The advisor said, “I expect death numbers to increase over two, three or four weeks, and then to gradually decrease.”
On Friday, Professor Jim Naismith, an expert in structural biology at Oxford University said, “Although Covid-19 is a mild disease for over 80% of us, today’s deaths will have come as a terrible blow to families.
“The increase in the deaths are following the exponential pattern predicted.
“This means we are likely to continue to see further increases in the numbers of daily deaths until social distancing measures have their effect.
“The deaths tomorrow and in the days ahead will be of people who were infected before the social distancing measures were implemented.”
The two-metre social distancing rule being used to keep people apart may need to be, at least four times larger to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
Dr Mike Tildesley, of the University of Warwick added, “We may expect to see the number of daily confirmed cases continue to climb, before starting to decline once the current social distancing measures start to have an effect.”
Construction work has started at the airport which will be able to hold room for 1,500 bodies and it is expected to be able to hold more.