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Coronavirus: England death count review reduces UK toll by 5,000 | Coronavirus: England death count review reduces UK toll by 5,000 |
(32 minutes later) | |
A review of how deaths from coronavirus are counted in England has reduced the UK death toll by more than 5,000, to 41,329, the government has announced. | A review of how deaths from coronavirus are counted in England has reduced the UK death toll by more than 5,000, to 41,329, the government has announced. |
The recalculation is based on a new definition of who has died from Covid. | The recalculation is based on a new definition of who has died from Covid. |
Previously, people in England who died at any point following a positive test, regardless of cause, were counted in the figures. | Previously, people in England who died at any point following a positive test, regardless of cause, were counted in the figures. |
But there will now be a cut-off of 28 days, providing a more accurate picture of the epidemic. | But there will now be a cut-off of 28 days, providing a more accurate picture of the epidemic. |
This brings England's measure in line with the other UK nations. | This brings England's measure in line with the other UK nations. |
New counting method | |
The new methodology for counting deaths means the total number of people who have died from Covid-19 comes down from 46,706 to 41,329 - a reduction of 12%. | |
And figures for deaths in England for the most recent week of data - 18 to 24 July - will drop by 75%, from 442 to 111. | And figures for deaths in England for the most recent week of data - 18 to 24 July - will drop by 75%, from 442 to 111. |
Prof John Newton, director of health improvement at Public Health England, said: "The way we count deaths in people with Covid-19 in England was originally chosen to avoid underestimating deaths caused by the virus in the early stages of the pandemic." | Prof John Newton, director of health improvement at Public Health England, said: "The way we count deaths in people with Covid-19 in England was originally chosen to avoid underestimating deaths caused by the virus in the early stages of the pandemic." |
But he said the new methods of calculating deaths from the virus would give "crucial information about both recent trends and overall mortality burden due to Covid-19". | But he said the new methods of calculating deaths from the virus would give "crucial information about both recent trends and overall mortality burden due to Covid-19". |
The health secretary in England, Matt Hancock, called for a review into the way deaths from coronavirus were calculated in July. | The health secretary in England, Matt Hancock, called for a review into the way deaths from coronavirus were calculated in July. |
It followed concerns raised by Oxford scientists that this was being carried out differently across the four nations of the UK. | It followed concerns raised by Oxford scientists that this was being carried out differently across the four nations of the UK. |
In Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the count only included people who died within four weeks of a positive test. | |
Someone who stays in intensive care with Covid-19 for five weeks and dies would not be counted as a coronavirus death, for example. | |
In England, there was no time limit. Someone who recovered from Covid-19 in March and died in a car crash in July would be counted as a coronavirus death. | |
Now the UK's four chief medical officers have decided to use a single, consistent measure and publish the number of deaths that occurred within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test confirmed in a lab, every day. | Now the UK's four chief medical officers have decided to use a single, consistent measure and publish the number of deaths that occurred within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test confirmed in a lab, every day. |