What’s going on with the UK death figures? I read that “deaths with Covid” are being reported in the numbers even if the person died weeks after recovering from it. As such, it seems PHE are not reporting death numbers until this is resolved.
A patient who has tested positive, but successfully treated and discharged from hospital, will still be counted as a COVID death even if they had a heart attack or were run over by a bus three months later.
Why no-one can ever recover from COVID-19 in England – a statistical anomaly - CEBM
Can some statty people take a look, am I getting the wrong end of the stick?
Coronavirus cases in the UK: daily updated statistics
Apparently it is part of an investigation announced the other day by Matt Hancock. I did post something on last thread - it was just the PH England figures being investigated. I'll see if I can link to it.
I posted this yesterday in post 766 as part of a UK roundup. Here is the relevant bit and link again below.
Full article Hancock calls for urgent review on Covid death data
"Health Secretary Matt Hancock has called for an urgent review into how coronavirus deaths have been recorded in England.
It follows confirmation from Public Health England that reported deaths may have included people who tested positive months before they died.
The other UK nations are only thought to include those who die within 28 days of having coronavirus.
There have been 40,528 deaths linked to the virus in England.
"Prof Carl Heneghan from University of Oxford, who spotted the issue with the data, told the BBC there was "huge variation" in the numbers of daily deaths reported in England by PHE.
While NHS England currently reports 30-35 deaths per day, Public Health England's data often shows double that or more, he said.
The reason is that anyone who has tested positive for coronavirus but then died at a later date of another cause would still be included in PHE's Covid-19 death figures.
"By this PHE definition, no one with Covid in England is allowed to ever recover from their illness,"
Prof Heneghan says."
Well this is interesting. Could this mean England deaths are overstated? It will be interesting to see what Dr. Campbell says about this in his next update. And maybe the US data needs reviewing too?
I didn't have any comments yesterday about this anomaly so haven't looked into it further as I was hoping Dr. Campbell might address it. Perhaps people are awaiting the review results?