Looks like they just published the latest report:I agree with that, but the fact is that UK is not reporting on a daily basis COVID deaths outside the hospitals. It is publishing them weekly, but only for England and Wales, and it is not up to date (right now it's up to week ending 3 April 2020). So the number of deaths in the UK that we can see on worldometers website is only for people who died in the hospitals, and the offical number of deaths in the UK will be even higher eventually.
Keeping in mind those are deaths officially counted as Covid-19, whether or not that's the actual cause.
But looking at the overall mortality data (regardless of corona), here's the picture. That's around 15,000 excess deaths (i.e., above average, whereas the deaths from Jan 11 to Mar 20 were all below average) in those last 3 weeks, 12,000 of which have been attributed as "involving COVID-19".
Week number | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |
Week ended | 03-Jan-20 | 10-Jan-20 | 17-Jan-20 | 24-Jan-20 | 31-Jan-20 | 07-Feb-20 | 14-Feb-20 | 21-Feb-20 | 28-Feb-20 | 06-Mar-20 | 13-Mar-20 | 20-Mar-20 | 27-Mar-20 | 03-Apr-20 | 10-Apr-20 |
Total deaths, all ages | 12,254 | 14,058 | 12,990 | 11,856 | 11,612 | 10,986 | 10,944 | 10,841 | 10,816 | 10,895 | 11,019 | 10,645 | 11,141 | 16,387 | 18,516 |
Total deaths: average of corresponding week over the previous 5 years 1 (England and Wales) | 12,175 | 13,822 | 13,216 | 12,760 | 12,206 | 11,925 | 11,627 | 11,548 | 11,183 | 11,498 | 11,205 | 10,573 | 10,130 | 10,305 | 10,520 |
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