ELEVEN more evacuees are due to arrive at RAF Brize Norton today after being airlifted out of Wuhan - the Chinese city at the centre of the outbreak.
It comes after a 44-year-old man in the Phillippines became the first person to die from the virus outside of China.
The outbreak has now claimed more than 300 lives and the number of confirmed cases of the infection is nearing 15,000.
The second group of evacuees boarded a French flight and will be bought to Arrowe Park Hospital in the Wirral where they will spend 14 days in quarantine, foreign secretary Dominic Raab said.
Mr Raab also said the Government is doing all it can to help Britons leave Wuhan if they want to.
The lastest repatriation comes as the Government launched a public health campaign advising people on how to slow down the spread of the virus.
Similar to the Catch it, Bin it, Kill it campaign used to tackle the flu - it will promote washing hands regularly and using a tissue to sneeze into.
Official Government posters.
The adverts will be plastered on social media, in newspapers, and on the radio and will also target publications and forums in the UK known to be read by Chinese nationals here, the Department of Health said.
On Friday there were reports of several people being tested for the virus in Oxfordshire.
At the time Oxford University Hospitals and South Central Ambulance Service said it would neither confirm or deny the reports.
But as of Saturday, 210 people in the UK had tested for the coronavirus and only two of them had tested positive.
One person has been confirmed as a University student in York, and the other is a member of their family.
On Friday one Oxford commuter was caught in a 'virus' scare at the station.
Some of the 83 Britons in quarantine in the Wirral shared video footage of their first hours in lockdown at the NHS staff accommodation, the block where they are staying.
They showed their food and other essentials they had been provided with as well as entertainment like TVs and PlayStations.
As it is, the risk level in the UK remains moderate, having been raised from low last week - the same day that the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared an international public health emergency.
As of Saturday, there had been several confirmed cases of the virus elsewhere in Europe: in France, there were six, Russia and Italy there were two and in Sweden and Spain there was one.
Official advice from the Government:
- Carry tissues to catch your coughs and sneezes. Make sure to bin the tissues afterwards.
- Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water or use sanitiser gel.
- Keep an eye on the Public Health England and Department of Health Twitter feeds which are regularly updated with the latest information on how the UK is dealing with coronavirus and what you should be doing to protect yourself. You can also visit www.gov.uk/coronavirus.
- If you are a traveller who has arrived back in the UK from China's Hubei province within the last 14 days, you should stay at home and avoid having visitors. Call 111 to let the NHS know of your recent travel, or if you are in Northern Ireland, call your GP.
- If you have come back from anywhere else in mainland China in the last 14 days and develop symptoms of cough, fever or shortness of breath, you should self-isolate and call the NHS 111 line, or if you are in Northern Ireland, call your GP.
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