Selwyn
Established Member
Any excess deaths are horrific and should never be classed as collateral damage but there is no simple answer to the question. It was concuded by some experts that throughout last year even when hospitals were quiet late summer people were still avoiding hospitals, doctors and surgeries as they were scared, there were tv adverts saying "the NHS is open for business, don't put health issues off", what else were they suposed to do? You cant force people.
The other question that also has to be asked is how do we know there would not have been even more excess deaths at home had the hospitals and surgeries been completely overun and many more staff off work ill because the virus was allowed to run even more rampant than it did?
Both my wife and daughter had major operations in September without issue because they had the sense to do something about it I know others locally who didn't, not the fault of the system.
Given that the IFR curve looks very similar all over Europe (incl Sweden) then it appears unlikely that there would have been massive amounts of excess deaths if we hadn't locked down.
Take away the care home **** up which was a mistake, take away excess deaths from non covid which arguably could have been saved at some point and then its a different picture. If you have a few years with below excess deaths then at some stage surely you can see that you will have excess deaths at some point?? It has to be unless you believe octogenarians should live forever?
There is no doubt there was a genuine huge spike of excess deaths last April. But now it is a quite a smaller hump of excess deaths but the data is not all there yet. It seems unlikely we will have a massive amount of excess winter deaths so far.