Half of Brits are now likely have antibodies to the CCP virus—from either natural immune response or from vaccination—according to official modeling based on blood samples. The latest infection survey data from the Office for National Statistics estimate that in England over 54 percent of people would have tested positive for antibodies to the Communist Party Virus (CCP) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus. For those aged over 65 in England—all of whom have been offered the vaccine—over eight out of ten people had antibodies. For those between the ages of 16 and 65, fewer than 60 percent had antibodies, with estimates as low as around one in four for Scotland and Northern Ireland. The data covers the week ending 14 March. Two months earlier, just one in seven people had antibodies. “The upward trend in antibody positivity in the latest data will principally be because more and more …