The information also shows higher rates of long Covid in deprived areas and people with particular ethnic backgrounds, parents, carers and those with another long-term condition.
Rose quickly deteriorated. "I was in bed all the time. I was coughing and I felt like I [was] struggling to breathe. Then I was hit by a headache. [It was] agony [and] I couldn't open my eyes."When one of her sons asked if she was OK, she was unable to speak and so she wrote "999" in the air with her finger.
Rose was admitted to intensive care at Scunthorpe General, where she found herself being cared for by her own colleagues.She feared that neither she nor her baby would survive."I was constantly coughing, bringing up blood and phlegm, and I was really struggling for breath," she said.
"The obstetric consultant came and said 'We need to deliver this baby', and I said 'No, there is no chance you're going to deliver this baby because if I am dying, I'd rather die with the baby'."Her husband, Jimmi, persuaded Rose to change her mind, and Catherine was delivered by Caesarean section at 28 weeks.
But Rose was so ill in intensive care that it was more than two weeks before she met her daughter.
Catherine is now four and a half. Energetically playing games with her three brothers and her cousin, she shows little sign that she weighed just 1kg (2lb 3oz) at birth and spent the first two months of her life in neonatal intensive care.between Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin last week, but within hours of it being announced, both Moscow and Kyiv accused the other of breaching it.
Earlier on Tuesday, Moscow said Ukraine had continued to target Russia's civilian energy infrastructure while the peace talks in Riyadh were under way.The alleged attack showed Zelensky was "incapable of sticking to agreements", Russia's defence ministry said.
It came after Russiatargeting north-eastern Ukraine on Monday, leaving more than 100 people wounded in the city of Sumy.