|
|
|
|
|
by teslabox
1990 days ago
|
|
My Aunt's friend's liver had failed - I think she was going to get fluid drained off her liver semi-regularly [0], and was getting worked up for a liver transplant. Eventually she started hospice care. This woman tested negative for COVID-19 a week before she died, but the postmortem test came back positive. My uncle (an MD) blew his gasket, "SHE DIED OF COVID", but I think really she was dying anyways. Maybe the virus pushed her over the edge, but she most certainly did NOT "die of covid". I should look up this death certificate. The years of life lost to COVID-19 is minuscule - many deaths are simply "pulled forward" by 6 months or a year. The deaths of teenagers and young adults who kill themselves because of the response to the pandemic are tragic [1, for example]. 60+ years of life lost vs. 0 years lost by my Aunt's friend (who was already on hospice). [0] https://www.ouh.nhs.uk/patient-guide/leaflets/files/110215pa... says fluid buildup in abdomen is commonly caused by liver disease [1] https://nypost.com/2020/12/08/maine-teen-commits-suicide-ami... (minor edits) |
|
Imagine your aunt is being transported to the hospice and there is a road traffic accident and she dies in that accident. What killed her, the RTA or her failing liver?
Imagine she gets to the hospice safely, and a negligent nurse gives her a triple dose of some medication and she dies. What killed her, the failing liver or the incompetent nurse?
People seem to misunderstand how cause of death is worked out.
> he years of life lost to COVID-19 is minuscule - many deaths are simply "pulled forward" by 6 months or a year.
We know from the first wave that covid-19 was killing people on average 11 years before they would have died otherwise.