Big Numbers today

Anything around 500-550 will well on track.

Sorry forgot to mention from where so added ONS after posting. Some idea of adjusted excess deaths a well. Not sure if they have included things like people who went to hospital with heart problems last year to at least part compensate for that type of area and not going this year.
 
Sponsored Links
545 today - on the upper end of on track, but still 13% WoW decline. At this rate we will be avg. 50 per day by end of June.
 
Last edited:

I'm going to totally ignore that and leave you to do it yourself and also say what ever you like as a result of me telling to do just that. I am pretty sure what you will say so go ahead. Alternative - spend a couple of hours looking - yourself.
 
Sponsored Links
I'm going to totally ignore that and leave you to do it yourself and also say what ever you like as a result of me telling to do just that. I am pretty sure what you will say so go ahead. Alternative - spend a couple of hours looking - yourself.

When you take the trouble to post, it is presumably with the intention of conveying information. In an ideal world, accurately, and even better, succinctly.
Something you repeatedly fail to do. On both counts.
 
havn't done one of these for a while.
UK not doing too well in comparison, sadly Scotland are performing the worst at the moment followed closely by Sweden (who didn't really bother with a lock down)
x chart01.gif
 
Scotland are performing the worst

please explain.

According to your graph, the "deaths per million" is now about the same as in UK as a whole, and never got as bad as UK as a whole.

Why do you show Scotland and not England?
 
please explain.

According to your graph, the "deaths per million" is now about the same as in UK as a whole, and never got as bad as UK as a whole.

Why do you show Scotland and not England?
was mainly commenting on the latest figures for the last 7 days (and I accept that the figures are all a bit suspect and could be partially down to how well individual countries can count)

I have used scotland as that is where I live so it is more pertinent to myself and the country I would like to be doing best not the worst.

Little difference in the figures between scotland and the rest of the UK , but the UK as a whole do not seem to be getting on top of the situation as well as other European countries have. I'm disappointed.

Sweden's lack of lockdown now seems to be showing, not sure what our excuse is.
 
This is from yesterdays brief

InHospital.jpg


Bit of a problem. Scale always the same and doesn't relate to populations so apparent R value is meaningless but some seem to be viewing it that way. So have added cases-deaths. 2 where the info available is split. Can't find similar for the devolved lot.

:( Should have rechecked that before posting. Ok but east of england should be 202-51
 
This is from yesterdays brief

View attachment 193060

Bit of a problem. Scale always the same and doesn't relate to populations so apparent R value is meaningless but some seem to be viewing it that way.

It doesn't relate to populations for a reason. There is no R-number on the slide and you cannot deduce an R number from the data on that slide.
 
Another that may be of interest especially in relationship to current news. Makes me wonder what went wrong in care homes. Some from that source did go to hospital as well but no signs of numbers.

AcuteLung.jpg
 
I'm going to totally ignore that and leave you to do it yourself and also say what ever you like as a result of me telling to do just that. I am pretty sure what you will say so go ahead. Alternative - spend a couple of hours looking - yourself.
???????????
 
They're full of old people, many of whom are ill.

True but some can be seen from an expected flu peak and then a drop off. It also isn't as simple as you imply. Personal experience from having to find some where for my mother. I visited a number of them. One common factor is age. It's pretty difficult to differentiate past that other than nursing homes but even those aren't dead simple.
 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top