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peter gotch  
#1 Posted : 30 September 2020 09:09:30(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

There have been parallel debates about numbers of Covid deaths across two threads so that it becomes ever more difficult to keep up with the discussion, not least since one of those thread is now on to its 15th page.

But as pointed out the number of deaths attributed to Covid in the UK, fell quite dramatically when the UK Govt decided to change the recording to deaths within 28 days of a positive test, ostensibly partly as that was the threshold that the Scottish Govt had been using.

Eurostat generally calculates deaths on the basis of those which occur within 1 year of the initiation, which approximates to the year and a day enshrined in British legal principles e.g. someone gets assaulted and if they die within 366 days then the perpetrator could be tried for murder or manslaughter.

Many deaths which are attributed to Covid may also mention something else on the death certificate. So, infected with Covid, then gets pneumonia which may be the proverbial straw that breaks the camel's back.

But if there has been no positive test for Covid then the death certificate might only mention pneumonia.

Hence, the current method used to record the stats both under-records AND over-records as would just about any method.

UNDER-records as doesn't count deaths where there has been no positive test OR (for some stats) where Covid is not mentioned on the certificate OR where any positive test or diagnosis was beyond the current thresholds used - 28 and 60 days.

OVER-records as assumes that almost all deaths within 28 days of a positive test are attributable to Covid. The exception would be eg. death in a road traffic accident within 28 days of such test unless a medical practitioner decided that being sick with Covid was causative of someone eg. not looking right and left before trying to cross the road. 

...and OVER-recorded (arguably), particularly in the early months of the pandemic as accelerated the deaths of those with terminal or life threatening diseases who then acquired Covid or who did not receive the care they might have in other times.

What these stats do not count is the increased toll of death and disability that is not directly but indirectly caused by the pandemic, e.g. the person who dies from cancer due to suspension of clinics, or the inability of medics to gain access to those needing healthcare in some parts of the globe.

Similarly these stats do not count the decreased toll of death and disability from e.g. improved air quality resulting from Coronavirus restrictions - less traffic (at least for a time), ditto less pollution being emitted from factories etc. At the start of the pandemic the air quality in Wuhan changed from permanently being in the Red zone to reasonably OK.

So, arguably the most important statistics are those which measure increased (or decreased) overall mortality on a like for like year/month basis (over a sufficiently long time frame).

The last time I remember the official stats for excess mortality in the UK was before the Covid count was changed - at the time excess mortality (compared to the average for the relevant months in the previous 5 years) was significantly higher than the number of deaths attributed to Covid.

Whether comparing with the average of the previous 5 years is a sufficiently long time frame is debatable. You need to take into account variables such as economic activity (or lack of) and when e.g. the last bad flu year occurred.

thanks 1 user thanked peter gotch for this useful post.
chris42 on 01/10/2020(UTC)
A Kurdziel  
#2 Posted : 30 September 2020 09:21:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

I am not entirely sure that this has anything to do with us as H&S professionals. In the good old pre covid days out job was to ensure that our employers essentially did their legal and moral duties ie

  • Identify significant hazards “arising out of or in connection with work at the workplace”
  • Evaluating the risk of the hazard manifesting itself
  • Establish what are the optimum controls for managing those risks
  • Ensuring that they are applied and working
  • Auditing to assess if any of this stuff is actually working
  • Explaining this to management and other stake holders in words of two syllables or less

Challenging but possible

Now we have been dragged into a public health task where we have to apply controls decided by diktat for a risk which is out of our control by a load of people with classics degrees whose main talent is getting themselves elected into office.

Is this task simply impossible and are we just the fall guys?  

thanks 1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
webstar on 30/09/2020(UTC)
Manion16110  
#3 Posted : 30 September 2020 18:22:54(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Manion16110

This is from the .gov web page: - 

(1) Number of deaths of people who had had a positive test result for COVID-19 and died within 28 days of the first positive test. The actual cause of death may not be COVID-19 in all cases. People who died from COVID-19 but had not tested positive are not included and people who died from COVID-19 more than 28 days after their first positive test are not included. Data from the four nations are not directly comparable as methodologies and inclusion criteria vary.

(2) A death in someone who has tested positive becomes progressively less likely to be directly due to COVID-19 as time passes and more likely to be due to another cause.

As I visit differing locations - differing local rules are applied by someone - there is a massive inconsistencies same as the govenment.

peter gotch  
#4 Posted : 03 October 2020 14:02:26(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Whilst noting that the debate has raged on in another thread....

AK - I sympathise with your philosophical position but think that it is inevitable that H&S professionals will be expected to be part of the solution, though they should not be expected to lead compliance.

Manion - You have essentially repeated what you have posted on two other threads, but I am not sure what your conclusion is?

Are you saying that the published numbers overstate reality, understate reality or that they are just statistics published with some definition of how the numbers have been counted?

John Murray  
#5 Posted : 04 October 2020 10:55:55(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
John Murray

As I have said before; CV19 has killed nobody.

They have died from a variety of causes *linked* to being infected by the virus, just as many die from causes linked to being infected with influenza.

Changing the notation time to 28 days was always about reducing the death count, they would have changed it to 24 hours if they thought they could have gotten away with it!

My personal observation is that if someone has been diagnosed as having a CV19 infection, their death should be counted even if they have languished in an ICU for 50 days.

achrn  
#6 Posted : 05 October 2020 09:46:10(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
achrn

Originally Posted by: John Murray Go to Quoted Post

My personal observation is that if someone has been diagnosed as having a CV19 infection, their death should be counted even if they have languished in an ICU for 50 days.

Which makes it the first disease ever to have a 100% mortality rate.

peter gotch  
#7 Posted : 05 October 2020 10:34:27(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

achrn

I guess that John meant someone who was diagnosed (particularly with a positive test) who fairly soon ended up in an ICU for 50 days (or longer).

If diagnosed and then apparently recovered and then taken to ICU at a later date apparently due to some other condition, then unlikely to be counted and thence would not be a "disease with a 100% mortality rate".

Always possible that such delayed referral to ICU could be linked to "long Covid" - but that just reminds of the need to understand the method of counting, whatever that might be.

Changing the method of counting part way through a pandmic to miraculously reduce the number of deaths by a few thousand was always going to give the impression of being driven by political convenience.

In a better world, an authoritive body such as WHO would define how the numbers should be counted and all "responsible" countries would count on a like for like basis, but little prospect of that any time soon!!

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