There have now been more than 12,000 deaths from coronavirus in the UK.
After two days over the Easter weekend when the daily death toll dropped, on Tuesday it went up again to 813 registered deaths across England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
However that does not mean more people died in the previous 24 hours with deaths across different NHS trusts sometimes taking days to register.
It is hoped the outbreak will reach the 'peak' and begin to plateau this week.
Despite that, the UK lockdown shows little sign of being lifted soon and is expected to continue into May.

England NHS Trusts with most Covid-19 deaths:
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust: 460
Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust: 328
London North West University Health Care NHS Trust: 299
Barts Health NHS Trust: 246
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust: 224
University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust: 215

Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust: 204
Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust: 184
Croydon Health Services NHS Trust: 181
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust: 181
Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust: 176
St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust: 174
Some trusts have been almost untouched by the pandemic until now.
Cumbria, Northumberland and Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust has just two deaths.
Three have been recorded at the Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust and one at the Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership trust.
Data released by NHS England shows the regions which are worst hit by the outbreak:
East of England: 1,156
London: 3,071
Midlands: 2,289
North East and Yorkshire: 1,355
North West: 1,450
South East: 1,159
South West: 525
The figures also show the deadliest days for the region with 198 deaths in London on April 4, 99 in the East of England on April 8, 171 in the Midlands on April 8 and 114 in the North West on April 7.

The deadliest day for the South West, which is by far the region with the fewest deaths, was also on April 8 with 42 deaths.
Despite the 'peak' appearing to have past for all of the regions - the numbers are gradually decreasing - the deaths were still in the hundreds for four of the regions on April 9 and three on April 11.
The NHS England figures are also broken down by age:
0 - 19 years old: 8
20 - 39 years old: 87
40 - 59 years old: 835
60- 79 years old: 4,406
80+: 5669
The figures do not include deaths in care homes or in the community with the fear that thousands are currently unreported because of the system used by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) which uses an almost two week delays to ensure accuracy.

How many people are dying at home?
The ONS report revealed 406 deaths (in the week up to April 3) that were not included in the Department of Health's official tally because they occurred outside hospitals.
Of these:
- 217 took place in care homes
- 33 in hospices
- 136 in private homes
- 3 in other communal establishments
- 17 elsewhere
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has today urged the Government to publish its exit strategy from the Covid-19 lockdown this week.
In a letter to Dominic Raab, who is deputising for Boris Johnson, Sir Keir confirmed that Labour would support the Government if, as is expected, it extends the lockdown later this week.
But he said: "The question for Thursday therefore is no longer about whether the lockdown should be extended, but about what the Government's position is on how and when it can be eased in due course and on what criteria that decision will be taken."
Labour's call comes as the Government faces mounting pressure to set out how and when it plans to lift the Covid-19 lockdown restrictions. No precise strategy has yet been announced.
A Government source said: "Our strategy is focused on saving lives.
"We have been clear that all decisions will be guided by the scientific advice and data.
"Talk of an exit strategy before we have reached the peak risks confusing the critical message that people need to stay at home in order to protect our NHS and save lives."