The Gov UK website has been improving a lot recently and adding new data features that help.
Here is their table of all the England regions for the past 7 days.
The first number shows the total cases in that region over the past 7 days.
The second number alongside is the Weekly Pop Score (which is those cases measured against the regional population so each region can be compared with one another as to how the case number squares up based on size - so that number is basically weekly cases per 100,000 people)
The principle is exactly like the weekly pop scores I list for all the 10 GM boroughs in my update every evening).
As always the LOWER the pop score the better, but of course less densely populated regions have natural advantages over urban areas in a pandemic so spread is not so easy.
The most interesting thing this table shows is that the North West is no longer the region with the highest Pop Score as it has been for most of the late Summer/Autumn.
It is now number 5 and London is catching up too and was in the Summer way behind the gap now existing.
Every indicator these days is pointing to the tier 3 restrictions as applied to the NW have been the most effective way of handling this second wave and have had the most impact in bringing numbers down.
It was actually an advantage that Merseyside adopted them first and GM later after the debate over money. We saw then how quickly rates fell on Merseyside and I posted about it then as it was so startling, It took a little longer in GM as we were by then higher and had been for longer, but it has worked here too after just a couple of weeks.
Unfortunately the downside of this is that scientists and the government will have realised this is the best way to stem the tide until the cavalry arrives with mass immunisation. So I expect much of the urban areas of the UK to go back into tier 3 or enter them if they were not before in hope that even a Christmas/New Year blip will ride through the apparent way it can suppress numbers.
I don't think even the scientists or governments really know why this blend of restrictions worked. But even if they got there by trial and error it seems they are likely to stick with it now they have found it.
Yorkshire and The Humber 19,729 Weekly Pop 358.5
West Midlands 19,468 Weekly Pop 328.1
South West 9,686 Weekly Pop 172.2
South East1 6,284 Weekly Pop 177.4
North West 19,941 Weekly Pop 271.6
North East 9,497 Weekly Pop 355.7
London 17,296 Weekly Pop 193
East of England 8,755 Weekly Pop 140.4
East Midlands 13,946 Weekly Pop 288.4