Healdplace
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 12 May 2013
- Messages
- 15,985
IF is the big word there.If it's plateauing at this level, that is something we could learn to live with quite easily. With typical deaths from all causes at around 9000 per week for this time of year the proportion that are Covid related will be quite a way down the list and well into the noise of typical week to week variations. In fact, from the graph below, the third wave hasn't noticeably registered at all on the UK death rate thanks to the vaccination programme.
View attachment 22514
These NW deaths are coming still from weeks ago when cases were more than double what they are now in the NW. And NW was far and away the place with the most admitted daily, people in hospital and those on ventilators.
THAT only shifted a week or so ago as other regions climbed and started to take over. So now NW is below three other large regions on all of those measures:-
London, MIdlands and NE & Yorkshire
The deaths from these three regions are yet to climb enough to be over NW day after day given the 2/3 weeks lag.
But that will surely happen soon and even if NW numbers continue to go down these will for a week or two overtake were we were.
So I would not be confident we ARE at the peak of deaths for that reason,
The rest yes. And the low time the other regions seem to have stayed high suggests it will be a short peak over 100 a day if we get there.
I predicted a peak of around 100 deaths a day in England hospitals weeks ago and have had little confidence in what was by no means more than a (mildly!) educated guess. But it seems it was less far off the mark than some of the experts,
So guessing might be the right approach and I hope mine proves as wrong as some of them were.