isleaiw1, on 23 April 2020 - 10:15 AM, said:
Fish, its a very good question and may explain - or may not - the different per capita death rates. They very carefully say when declaring the numbers in the UK that they died with covid-19. Which means that they have been tested and had it but it may not have been primary cause of death.
My wife's death certificate said she died of multiple organ failure. No sh 1 t sherlock. No mention of the underlying problems which caused the first of those failures which created the others in domino effect. She had pneumonia as a side effect of her illness - maybe that killed her. Who knows what they would write in todays world, but it is a very good question to ask.
Not sure there should be any confusion with these statistics, but there seems to be....
1. People who die in hospital after testing positive for Corvid-19 (as published by the government daily)
2. People who die outside hospital without a test but have it mentioned on their death certificates (collated by the ONS)
Where the contention is, and I assume this is what you are referring in the 2nd para is the abnormally high level of people passing away for this time of year; which 1 and 2 above don't account for. There is anecdotal evidence that doctors may not mention Covid-19 on death certificates deliberately. In fact it may be more than anecdotal
https://www.dailymai...s-patients.html
There is also growing publicity about people passing away with unrelated illness because they are unwilling or unable to seek help due to Corvid-19
This post has been edited by azul: 23 April 2020 - 11:30 AM