That is excess deaths,that isn’t Covid deaths lol
Care to tell us how 80,000 excess deaths occurred last year.
Do you know of another means why they died?
That is excess deaths,that isn’t Covid deaths lol
Influenza is a nightmare. And these figures change on different sitesCare to tell us how 80,000 excess deaths occurred last year.
Do you know of another means why they died?
Influenza is a nightmare. And these figures change on different sites
I still don't understand this, because white nations usually have good access to healthcare. Makes no sense and is contradictory.
I read it, and I am not arguing, just discussing.
We seem to be trying to blame groups of people - obese, old, those with chronic health conditions, those living in more deprived areas, those that have had a hard life. It is not their fault.
You clearly haven't read my post at all, have you?
I really did. Why do you think my comments are specifically about you and what you said?
Your comment just prompted me to carry on the discussion, it really is not an argument.
Yes. Funded health care systems make difficult strategic decisions (linked to budgetary constraints) year in year out. This leads to some services receiving more £££ per patient than others. Therefore, whilst not the explicit intention of strategy or policy, it can be asserted a life does have an associated value. Not something anyone wants to admit, least of all governments and organisations of.So a life has an associated valuation?
Is the popeNot when the question is about lying; and Boris is a choice.
That is a sensible answerSo again you have no sensible answer.
Influenza is a nightmare. And these figures change on different sites
So your saying there isn’t 100s of flu deaths a year? What is the number you refer to as 000s?Is it normal to have 000s of flu deaths every year? Yes. Is it normal to have 000s of flu deaths between March and December? I'll save you hours of painstaking research... Nope!
Worst since WWII... The ONS is at pains to avoid that comparison for obvious reasons (excuses from deniers on here): population, wider overseas travel etc. But the spokesman said, and I'm paraphrasing, "Only the terminally dim or hard-of-thinking can avoid the truth- It's Covid what done it."
When Vallance was saying at the start that 20k deaths would be a good outcome, he referenced an expectation of 8k due to flu per year.
Please analyse the excess deaths figure and state how many of those would have died anyway had there been no covid