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by iso1631 2257 days ago
> Are mortality statistics available to that sort of granularity and speed

To answer my own question, yes

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/weekly-all-cause-mo...

I love gov.uk

Week 9 commences March 2nd (I'm assuming the weeks are the same as ISO weeks)

  Week | Total dead(E+W) | Covid (UK) | Excess mortality
  8  Feb24-Mar1 | 10,841 | 0    | ...
  9  Mar 2-8    | 10,816 | 3    | no
  10 Mar 9-15   | 10,895 | 32   | no
  11 Mar 16-22  | 11,019 | 300  | no
  12 Mar 23-29  | 10,645 | 1073 | no
  13 Mar30-Apr5 | n/a    | 3965 | yes -- England overall and 65+. not in Wales/Scotland/NI. Specific England regions - London, South East, E+W Midlands, North West

Note the graph showing the recent increase: https://i.imgur.com/McBopJql.png

The next weekly report is out tomorrow, which should have the total death figures for week 13.

It looks like in week 12 though, 10% of deaths in the UK were put down to COVID, but the total increase on the year before wasn't that high.

Next week will be englightening

Covid death figures from wikipedia.

GovUK also have this, hospital admissions. Look at the massive fall over the last few weeks.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/...

1 comments

Ah great find. I was looking for UK hospital admissions data.

That's pretty shocking. Pneumonia and respiratory has hardly moved (where is the wave???) yet there's a huge fall in emergency cardiac patients. That's worrying. It implies people having heart attacks are choosing not to go to hospital fast enough, even though they could.

I'm assuming that half those attendances aren't because of heart attacks, but are to do with routine follow up appointments?
Isn't this data for emergency admissions only?
True, "Emergency departments"

https://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/369/bmj.m1406.full.pdf

People are ignoring stroke symptoms and failing to ring 999 because they fear being a burden on the NHS in England duringthe covid-19 pandemic, the national clinical director for stroke has warned. Deb Lowe, consultant stroke physician at Wirral University Teaching Hospital, said that doctors across the country were seeing “quite striking reductions” in the number of people coming into hospital with symptoms of stroke. She said, “It appears that people aren’t seeking emergency help or going to hospital when they suspect a stroke, possibly due to fear of the virus or not wanting to be a burden on the NHS.”