China Daily

Study: UK has higher toll of elderly victims

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

It now looks as if many more elderly people with novel coronaviru­s have died in United Kingdom care homes than first thought, according to a group that represents notfor-profit providers.

The National Care Forum, known as the NCF, believes at least 4,000 elderly and disabled people died in a single week in the nation’s residentia­l and nursing homes.

The most up-to-date government figures put the total number of deaths in care homes at 217, as of April 3.

Vic Rayner, the NCF’s executive director, said it is time that the virus-related deaths of elderly people are included in daily government updates.

“Our current national debate on how to mitigate and exit this crisis is virtually entirely centered on the management of the peak within hospitals,” the BBC quoted her as saying. “We are overlookin­g how this crisis is playing out in other settings, which are there to protect those who are most vulnerable to the impact of the virus.”

The NCF made its claim in a report released against the backdrop of opposition politician­s and pressure groups in the UK calling on the government to ensure deaths in care homes are included in the official daily update of viruslinke­d deaths.

Previously, the government has said care-home deaths are being recorded, but that the process for doing so is slower than that for hospital deaths and cannot, therefore, be incorporat­ed into the daily total.

Major flaw

Virus-related deaths in care homes, hospices and private homes are measured separately to hospital deaths and are released each week by the Office for National Statistics.

But the NCF said that, in addition to the delay in the government’s issuing of data from care homes, the discrepanc­y between official figures and its own estimates suggest there may be a major flaw in the official data.

The organizati­on came up with its estimate of 4,000 deaths in one week after collecting informatio­n from care homes it represents; the facilities look after more than 30,000 people in the UK. Those 30,000 people equate to around 7.4 percent of the total number of people in such institutio­ns in England and Wales.

The report claims that, if the 299 virus-related deaths at NCF care homes between April 7 and April 13 were to be extrapolat­ed to represent the entire population of UK care homes, around 4,040 people with novel coronaviru­s-caused COVID-19 would have died in care homes that week.

Other organizati­ons in the care sector have released their own sobering estimates of the scale of the problem recently. Care England, which represents large providers in England, said it had recorded 7,500 more deaths than usual in its care homes during the past two weeks. Health consultanc­y Candesic conducted research for the Financial Times that found care home deaths totaled at least 6,000.

The Care Quality Commission, England’s health and social care regulator, has said it wants to clear up the confusion around just how many people are dying in the UK’s care homes and is working to “provide more detailed informatio­n”.

We are overlookin­g how this crisis is playing out in other settings, which are there to protect those who are most vulnerable to the impact of the virus.” Vic Rayner, executive director of the National Care Forum in the United Kingdom

 ?? SIMON DAWSON / REUTERS ?? People are seen wearing masks at St James’s park in London on Sunday, as the spread of the coronaviru­s continues in the United Kingdom.
SIMON DAWSON / REUTERS People are seen wearing masks at St James’s park in London on Sunday, as the spread of the coronaviru­s continues in the United Kingdom.

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