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Yes but you need to compare that stat to others, for example hospital deaths in the same period were massively down, which is understandable as people didn't want to go in.24th Nov
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Over 30,000 non-Covid-19 excess deaths at home in England and Wales since March
Extra deaths – known as “excess deaths” – are the number of deaths that are above the average for the corresponding period in the previous five years.
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I think more people will have died before their time because the NHS service has been restricted, hardly any face to face GP appointments, thousands of operations and tests postponed; plus the relentless fear people have been exposed to by the media, [and the initial 'save the nhs' message] probably put people off from going to get things checked out. [if in fact it had been possible in their area]
they are the most recent figures I can find on this, but think it's safe to say care homes will have continued to be under average for most the year from then on, and hospitals too, although probably not as much as they were in April/May. I expect home deaths will have dropped slightly, but still be higher than average.
Regarding just excess deaths
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.Between Weeks 1 and 12 in 2020, 138,916 deaths were registered, which was 4,822 fewer than the five-year average for these weeks. However, between Weeks 13 and 50, 440,598 deaths were registered, which was 72,709 more than the five-year average.
Showing that excess deaths were down at the start of the year, and as we didn't have late snow or ice like some years, I think it's safe to say that trend would have continued.
Using the most up-to-date data we have available, the number of deaths up to 11 December 2020 was 579,491, which is 67,864 more than the five-year average. Of the deaths registered by 11 December 2020, 72,546 mentioned COVID-19 on the death certificate. This is 12.5% of all deaths in England and Wales.
So you can see the number of C-19 deaths is pretty similar to the excess deaths. Some, undoubtedly, would have died anyway, but there's an offset that people who would normally have died from the flu, haven't because they haven't been anywhere to catch it.
It's still a bit early to do a detailed analysis as the full data to year end doesn't seem to have been published anywhere yet, and I think it's pretty likely numbers will be worse taking into account the sharp rises we had over Christmas.




