UK's real Covid death toll hits 150,000 - but weekly fatalities in England and Wales plunge below 1,000 for first time since October with 8% FEWER people dying than average
- Office for National Statistics data shows the grim milestone was crossed in the week to March 19
- But it came amid promising figures showing Covid deaths had dipped below 1,000 in England and Wales
- And that they were still in sharp decline, and had halved over the previous two weeks data is availableMore than 150,000 coronavirus deaths have been recorded in Britain since the pandemic began, official figures revealed today.
Announcing the grim milestone, the Office for National Statistics revealed 150,116 death certificates between the first cases being recorded in the UK and March 19 mentioned the virus.
But other promising figures showed weekly Covid deaths fell below 1,000 in England and Wales for the first time since October. And no excess deaths were recorded for the second week in a row, with fatalities from all causes down eight per cent on the five-year average.
Covid deaths have been in a downward spiral since the second wave peaked in January, when almost 1,500 virus victims were being recorded every day. For comparison, the figure has now dropped to below 100.
Britain has suffered the worst Covid death toll in Europe, and the fifth worst in the world, since the virus emerged in December 2019. Experts say this is linked to the rapid spread of the more infectious Kent variant in December, as well as the failure to protect care homes during the first wave.
Boris Johnson is hoping the mass vaccination drive — which has jabbed more than 30million Britons — will fend off any further waves of the virus. But scientists warn the emergence of new variants that may be able to dodge vaccine-triggered immunity could dent the roll-out.
The ONS publishes weekly coronavirus fatality counts after going through death certificates to identify those that mention the virus, leading to a delay of up to two weeks in their figures. Their count includes both suspected and confirmed Covid deaths.
The Department of Health, however, publishes daily death tolls from the virus based on people who die within 28 days of testing positive. Its death toll stands at 126,615.
Promising statistics show Covid deaths in England and Wales have dipped below 1,000 for the first time since October. Deaths from all causes - including dementia, heart disease and the virus, also remained below average
The number of deaths from all causes has remained below the number expected for the second week in a row. Statisticians said this was possible because more people have died earlier than expected due to the virus
Deaths among care home residents linked to the virus have also halved in two weeks, figures showed. There were 195 recorded in the week to March 19, the most recent available
All regions in England and Wales recorded fewer deaths than the five-year average in the week to March 19ONS figures for deaths linked to Covid by the date of death, as opposed to when it was registered, show the UK has now suffered more than 150,000 fatalities from the virus.
Of these more than a third — 55,407 — have occurred since the start of January when the second wave was at its peak.
Other measures of Covid deaths published by the ONS including registrations — when deaths are officially recorded — are yet to cross this threshold.
The UK has the world's fifth highest coronavirus death toll, behind only the US (550,000), Brazil (314,000), Mexico (202,000) and India (162,114), according to data compiled by John Hopkins University.
The same weekly ONS figures also showed England and Wales saw fewer than 1,000 deaths linked to the virus in the week ending March 19. It was the first time fatalities were in triple figures since the week ending October 12, when there were 978 fatalities.
There were 10,331 deaths from all causes — including dementia, heart disease and the virus — in the latest week, which was more than 800, or 8 per cent, below the five-year average for the number expected at this time of year.
Among care home residents, deaths linked to the virus halved in two weeks, after 195 were recorded in the seven days to March 19 compared to the 467 registered in the first week of the month.
And deaths from all causes among the residents were 30 per cent below the five-year average, after 2,126 were recorded compared to the 2,891 expected.
Statisticians calculate the five-year average to reveal whether more or fewer people are dying at a particular time of year than expected, highlighting when there is a spike in fatalities.
Experts have warned deaths will likely dip below the five-year average for weeks because the virus has caused more people to die earlier than they would have, had they not become infected.
All regions of England recorded fewer deaths from all causes than expected at this time of year, with the sharpest dip in the East of England (-14.5 per cent below average or 175 fewer deaths).
London had the second-sharpest dip (-11.3 per cent or 117 deaths), followed by the South West (-9.4 per cent or 116 deaths), North East (-8.1 per cent or 46 deaths) and the East Midlands (-6.8 per cent or 65 deaths).
Wales also saw its deaths dip below average after it recorded 106 fewer than expected, or a drop of 14.6 per cent.
The regions recording the fewest deaths are among the hardest hit during the second wave, with both London and the East of England pushed into Tier 4 measures in December amid a rampant Covid outbreak driven by the Kent variant.
There were also 1,617 deaths linked to flu and pneumonia, but only 293 of these had it recorded as the underlying cause of death. For comparison, 740 deaths had Covid recorded as the underlying factor.
There were also 1,617 deaths linked to flu and pneumonia, but only 293 of these had it recorded as the underlying cause of death. For comparison, 740 deaths had Covid recorded as the underlying factor
Most deaths linked to the virus have involved Britons aged over-70, official figures from the ONS have revealed
Most deaths involving the virus have also occurred in hospital, figures suggest, followed by care homes
And the number of deaths from all causes and from Covid decreased in the week to March 19, the latest available
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