Four more patients of Barts Health Trust – which covers Newham and Tower Hamlets – have died today after testing positive for coronavirus.

They were among 28 people - aged between 47 and 93 - who have died after testing positive for Covid-19 in England, NHS England said, bringing the total deaths in England to 414.

They included a 47-year-old who did not have an underlying health condition.

The others who died, including one person aged 93, did have underlying health conditions. Their families have been informed.

The coronavirus UK death toll has passed 460, on the day it was confirmed that the Prince of Wales tested positive for Covid-19.

The new figures came after the prime minister said the UK is “coping very well indeed under the most challenging possible circumstances”.

Boris Johnson said the government was “massively ramping up” testing for coronavirus, as he announced that 405,000 people have now signed up as volunteers to help vulnerable people.

He said it was hoped that “very soon” 250,000 tests would be carried out each day.

Speaking at the daily press conference inside Number 10, he added that he wanted to offer a “special thank you to everyone who has now volunteered to help the NHS.

“When we launched the appeal last night, we hoped to get 250,000 volunteers over a few days.

“But I can tell you that in just 24 hours, 405,000 people have responded to the call.

“That is already, in one day, as many volunteers as the population of Coventry.”

The figure was given as the Foreign Office announced that Steven Dick, 37, the deputy head of mission at the British Embassy in Budapest, had died after contracting coronavirus.

Earlier Clarence House announced that the Prince of Wales, 71, was self-isolating at home in Scotland with his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, 72, who does not have the virus.

A statement said Charles had “mild symptoms” and the couple had received tests on the NHS in Aberdeenshire after meeting the requirements for testing.

During the press conference, England’s chief medical officer, Professor Chris Whitty, dismissed claims made earlier by Professor Sharon Peacock, director of the National Infection Service at Public Health England (PHE), who said members of the public will be able to carry out coronavirus antibody tests at home very soon.

She said 3.5 million tests, which will tell people whether they have had the virus, would be made available and distributed via Amazon and in places like Boots.

But Prof Whitty said members of the public would not be buying these tests via the internet next week.

He stressed that frontline NHS workers would need the tests first, so they could get back to work if they have had already had the virus.

The NHS is also carrying out separate tests to see if people currently have the virus, which are being given to patients in hospitals alongside some community sampling.

Earlier, NHS England’s medical director, Professor Stephen Powis, said hundreds of thousands of these tests for Covid-19 per day could become a reality within weeks.

It comes as:

- Boris Johnson urged London Mayor Sadiq Khan to “get more Tubes on the line” but resisted calls to ban non-essential construction workers from heading to building sites.

- Parliament is set to adjourn for an early Easter break after emergency legislation to tackle Covid-19 is approved.

- The Prime Minister confirmed that ministers are considering asking black taxi drivers to act as a transport service for NHS workers.

Replying to a question about how well the country was coping, Mr Johnson said that “never in our history has the Government put its arms around people in the way we are doing now to help them get through this time”.

He added that a tailored package of support would be announced on Thursday to help self-employed people.

The PM said: “I do think when you look at the sheer scale of what the Government is doing to get this country through, we will cope and are coping very well indeed under the most challenging possible circumstances.”

Prof Whitty said it will be a “close run thing” for the NHS to get through the coming weeks without the coronavirus crisis overwhelming critical care capacity.

Everybody needed to follow the strict lockdown measures designed to slow the spread of the virus in order to give the NHS the best possible chance, he said, adding that the NHS was ramping up its capacity.

Although there was “not enormous pressure” at present, the NHS was braced for demand for critical care beds to rise over the next fortnight.

“Because of the actions that people are taking, and provided everybody continues to keep the social distancing measures - which are very difficult, in terms of staying within households, only doing absolutely essential things apart from exercise - that will help to pull down the demand a very long way,” he said.

He continued: “This is going to be a close run thing, we all know that. Anybody who looks around the world can see this is going to be difficult for every health system.”

Elsewhere, the British Medical Association (BMA) warned that doctors and patients will die without adequate personal protective equipment (PPE).

It said doctors are risking serious illness and death due to a lack of stock or local rationing, and it warned many more could go off sick unless immediate steps are taken.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has said millions of pieces of PPE have been sent out in recent days and a hotline has been set up so staff can report where there are shortages.

Speaking to the Commons science and technology committee earlier, leading expert Professor Neil Ferguson, from Imperial College London and a member of the Science Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), which advises the Government, said current predictions are that the NHS will be able to cope if lockdown measures are followed and capacity increases as planned.

“There will be some areas that are extremely stressed but we are reasonably confident - which is all we can be at the current time - that at the national level we will be within capacity,” he said.

Prof Ferguson said widespread testing is needed to help move the country from suppression measures and lockdown into something it can manage long-term.

He added: “We clearly cannot lock down the country for a year.

“The challenge that many countries in the world are dealing with is how we move from an initial intensive lockdown ... to something that will have societal effects but will allow the economy to restart.

“That is likely to rely on very large-scale testing and contact tracing. It should be stated that the entire world is in the very early stage of developing such strategies.”

Prof Ferguson said the hope is that once the lockdown is lifted, the infection can be kept at manageable levels.

He said the demand on intensive care in the UK will peak in approximately two to three weeks and then decline thereafter.

UK deaths from Covid-19 are also “unlikely” to be more than 20,000, he said.