The Earl of Chesterfield, on 14 April 2020 - 05:20 PM, said:
But it's not 'hindsight', is it.
You quoted 'us' being ten days behind Italy and inferior to Japan in your very first post. So even by your own admission the government had time to look and learn.
It's also a matter of record that Johnson and Co were still allowing mass gatherings whilst many others were locking down.
Please be my guest to go through the thread post by post to see who called that out and who resorted to racism. Or diversion. Or hypocrisy.
By the way, I see Sky News are now reporting the number of HOSPITAL deaths instead of a gross total. Meanwhile the Sun's Tom Newton-Dunn (that's the SUN, by the way) pointed out our numbers have been higher than France's if we include non hospital fatalities.
Be interesting to know why government graphs featured all the deceased abroad but not all the UK ones. Infact almost the kinda stunt some have accused the Chinese of...
Of course it’s hindsight when reacting to a post saying the Nightingale Hospitals haven’t been used and the money could have been better spent elsewhere
Yes we have always been 10 days behind Italy and as it stands we have just over half as many deaths at 11000, tens days ago on the 4th April Italy were at 15000 so we are doing better in that respect
I don’t disagree that a ban on mass gatherings should have come earlier, but I’m no virologist and the scientists said herd immunity was the way to go (before quickly changing their minds)
How do other countries count care home deaths?
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We cannot directly compare care home deaths in the UK with those in other countries as there are a range of different ways of recording these deaths.
In Ireland, France and Germany, official data on deaths includes those in care settings. Of Irish deaths which occurred up until 11 April, 54% had occurred in care homes, according to the country’s chief medical officer. Figures released by the French public health authority show 45% of deaths took place in care homes.
Italy and Spain by contrast do not report deaths in care settings regularly. In Italy, best estimates were based on a survey of 10% of care homes in the country. The death rate in this sample was extrapolated to reach an estimate for all care homes, which suggests 53% of coronavirus deaths were happening in care. In Spain, estimates based on regional totals submitted to the government also suggest those in nursing homes accounted for more than half of deaths.
Italy and Spain report the same as us, comparing us with China....borderline pathetic