Millennium Post

UK'S COVID-19 death toll tops 38,000, worst in Europe

The virus cases cross 4.19 million on Tuesday with over 285,100 deaths worldwide

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LONDON: The United Kingdom's COVID-19 death toll topped 38,000 as of early May, by far the worst yet reported in Europe, raising questions about Prime Minister Boris Johnson's handling of the Coronaviru­s crisis.

Figures published by the Office for National Statistics for England and Wales brought the United Kingdom's official death toll to 38,289 as of May 3 — up nearly 6,000 in the space of a week, according to a tally of death registrati­ons data.

The data came a day after Johnson set out a gradual plan to get Britain back to work, including advice on wearing homemade face coverings — though his attempt to lift the Coronaviru­s lockdown prompted confusion. Such a high UK death toll increases the pressure on Johnson: opposition parties say he was too slow to impose a lockdown, too slow to introduce mass testing and too slow to get enough protective equipment to hospitals.

The data painted a grim picture in care homes, which have been especially hard hit by the virus.

“Care homes (are) showing the slowest decline, sadly,” ONS statistici­an Nick Stripe said.

“For the first time that I can remember, there were more deaths in total in care homes than there were in hospitals in that week.” The figures showed care homes now account for a third of all COVID-19 deaths in England and Wales.

A Reuters Special Report published last week showed care homes bore the brunt of policy designed to shield its hospitals from COVID-19, leaving many of the weakest exposed.

Unlike the daily death toll announced by the government, Tuesday's figures include suspected deaths from COVID-19, the respirator­y disease caused by the novel Coronaviru­s.

Ministers dislike comparison­s of the headline death toll because Britain's performanc­e in part reflects the fact it has been quicker to publish comprehens­ive data on COVID-19 deaths than other European countries.

They say excess mortality the number of deaths from all causes that exceed the average for the time of year - is more meaningful because it is internatio­nally comparable.

Early evidence, though, suggests Britain is faring badly on that front too.

So far this year, there have been more than 50,000 excess deaths compared to five-year average, ONS statistici­an Stripe said. The ONS said deaths from all causes decreased for a second week running as of May 1, but 8,012 more people than average died in the 18th week of 2020.

The novel Coronaviru­s cases crossed 4.19 million worldwide on Tuesday while the global Covid-19 death toll hovers over 285,100, a tally stated.

The United States, Spain, the UK, Russia, Italy, France, Germany, Brazil, Turkey and Iran are the top 10 Coronaviru­s-affected countries in the world.

Of over 4 million total global Coronaviru­s cases, more than one million have been reported in the United States while over one million come from Europe from nations like Italy, Spain, France, the UK, among others.

When it comes to Covid19 fatalities, the United States leads the global tally. Of over 2.8 lakh Coronaviru­s deaths worldwide, the United States accounts for more than 80,000 fatalities.

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