Coronavirus: New Zealand has one confirmed case in entire population of five million people
While the UK continues to deal with a widespread coronavirus pandemic, New Zealand is on the verge of entirely eradicating the disease.
The country has notched up its 13th straight day of no reported new infections, while just one person in the nation of five million people is known to still have the virus.
The person in question is also not in hospital for treatment.
However, it remains likely that the country will import new cases once it reopens its borders, and officials say their aim remains to stamp out and contain new infections as they arise.
New Zealand has already lifted many of its virus restrictions and could remove most of those that remain, including limiting crowd sizes, next week.
Just over 1,500 people have contracted the virus during the outbreak, including 22 who died.
Last week, the last COVID-19 patient in hospital in New Zealand was discharged, marking the first time in two months that all hospitals were empty of people needing treatment for coronavirus.
New Zealand’s director-general of health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield, said the milestone was “another good position” for the country to be in.
The peak of hospital admissions came in April, when 20 people were in hospital receiving treatment, according to the country’s Ministry of Health.
Intensive care numbers peaked at five during April, and not a single person was admitted in May.
The death toll linked to COVID-19 topped 50,000 in the UK on Wednesday, according to news agency PA.
However, the official number of deaths in the UK stands at 39,811 out of 281,270 cases, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Coronavirus: what happened today
Click here to sign up to the latest news, advice and information with our daily Catch-up newsletter
Read more about COVID-19
How to get a coronavirus test if you have symptoms
How easing of lockdown rules affects you
In pictures: How UK school classrooms could look in new normal
How public transport could look after lockdown
How our public spaces will change in the future
Help and advice
Read the full list of official FAQs here
10 tips from the NHS to help deal with anxiety