excess deaths around 1928?

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

TheUnicorn

Established Member
Joined
21 Feb 2020
Messages
1,324
Reaction score
527
Location
South West
so, highest excess deaths since WW2 according to the BBC today, horrible, but not unexpected. They showed a chart showing spikes in the first and second world war, understandable, what I can't understand is a slightly smaller, but still significant spike around 1928. Can anyone explain this? My first thought was Spanish flue, but I think that was around 1918 / 1919. included the chart from the bbc site (doesn't show WW1 but did on TV earlier). All history lessons gratefully recieved

1610483321862.png
 
Seems to be 1929 that's the spike, maybe due to particular severity of the 1928/29 winter?
 
Stock market crash that started the Depression.

Pete

Happened in late 1929, effects wouldn't have fully hit the UK economy until 1930 and even then I'm not sure there's much statistical evidence of suicide, nor did it generate extreme poverty that would have resulted in deaths spiking. I'd be inclined to count that one out.
 
Could it be a weather event? Prolonged cold and snow for several months.


Other than that TV was first demonstrated in 1928. Couch potato lifestyle sets in quick!!
 
That'll be it then, fascinating stuff. It shows the average death rate due to the pandemic in the US during the 1918/19 pandemic was some 16% whereas the 1928/29 epidemic was 5%.
 
seems odd that the UK and the US would both suffer from the same flu epidemic, I'm assuming that the majority of travel would be by boat so you wouldn't have thought it would happen in both places at the same time?
 
My Dad was born in 1928.

It seems hard to imagine now, but when he was twelve his mum and dad sat him and his brother down and said "would you like to be evacuated to Wales". His brother said yes, so my Dad did the same.

Not that that has anything to do with this thread :)

As you were (y).......
 
It seems to me that the graph is not really very representatively helpful, it shows the percentage increase, that’s all well and good but it doesn’t say where or how many, is it the UK?is it the world? Or a little village in Hertfordshire?
 
It seems to me that the graph is not really very representatively helpful, it shows the percentage increase, that’s all well and good but it doesn’t say where or how many, is it the UK?is it the world? Or a little village in Hertfordshire?
bbc so i assumed it was uk, now not so sure
 
I have just been watching tonight‘s news on the BBC with very similar graphs of deaths and I am extremely sceptical, but are they any worse than any other news organisation? They all love to exaggerate.
They based their graphs on a previous five year average, I can guarantee that showed what they wanted to show.
 
The graph shows the change in standardised mortality rates (little adjustments for the structure of the population) for England & Wales, which have some of the most closely analysed mortality in the world.

> the later death spike may have been infant mortality.

Infant mortality occurs mostly within the first few years of life, and you reach the point of lowest mortality at about age 10. You then start to accelerate up quickly as testosterone kicks in!

> you wouldn't have thought it would happen in both places at the same time?

Remember the major population centres in both countries were huge maritime cities with a roaring intercontinental passenger traffic that covered the Atlantic in a week, just enough time for the whole boat to become infected.

> They based their graphs on a previous five year average, I can guarantee that showed what they wanted to show.

These graphs are all derived from analyses done by the Continuous Mortality Investigation of the IFOA (Institute & Faculty of Actuaries), and have been released weekly since March. This one is newsworthy as it covers 2020 to year end. I imagine five years is enough to show the natural variation, but not so many that it makes it impossible to read.

Mortality improvements (changes in mortality rates, as opposed to the rates themselves) are slippery things to estimate. They require an order of magnitude more data, and as you can see from the graph even at the best of times are extremely volatile. They are usually the sum of all the different things that are operating on causes of death in the population: on the one hand, better cancer treatments, medicines, and so on; on the other, continually worsening lifestyle factors like obesity and alcohol.
 
Back
Top