nwgull
Well-known member
Schools will of course mean a rise, however it’s worth remembering that the R number is simply a reflection of increased numbers testing positive and doesn’t reflect the fact that the number of tests we’ve been doing has nearly doubled between the two periods they’ve measured the R rate for, week on week the numbers testing positive is very stable, in spite of such a massive increase in testing..
I think that the R number is calculated based on random testing as much as anything. They’d certainly account for the increased testing numbers anyway.
You’re right though, it will inevitably rise amongst school-age kids. What’s important is that they’re not vulnerable and that hospitalisations and deaths continue to fall (although these lag actual infections by 3-4 weeks).