4-PAGE SPECIAL INVESTIGATION
In a shocking article, the Mail’s BEL MOONEY revealed her father was wrongly certified as dying of Covid. Your avalanche of responses show she is far from alone ...
There are three things you should know about the last few weeks of Jessie Wylde’s life. The first is that she had dementia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a lung condition that causes severe breathing difficulties; the second is that she was a resident at Aldergrove Manor care home in Wolverhampton; and the third, that at the time Jessie, 83, was a resident at Aldergrove, at least, there were no confirmed cases of Covid.
She was transferred there at the beginning of last year from the high dependency unit at the city’s New Cross hospital, where she was being treated for respiratory problems.
On April 26, around three months after leaving hospital, Jessie died.
Shortly before her death, a doctor at Aldergrove assessed her and confirmed that she had COPD.
Yet despite being given such a diagnosis, despite the absence of an outbreak of Covid in Aldergrove and despite not testing positive for Covid herself, the cause of Jessie’s death was registered as Covid.
The revelation compounded her family’s grief.
‘I told the registrar that I would not accept this,’ her son Gary said when we spoke to him this week. ‘I said, “I will never, ever allow the cause of my mother’s death to be registered as Covid”.’
The person who made that decision was an on-call doctor.
When he found out, Mr Wylde, 59, the managing director of a windows firm, contacted Aldergrove’s regular doctor, who knew Jessie.
‘The doctor explained to me that in the absence of a test, doctors are encouraged to put down Covid on death certificates,’ he said. ‘ But he agreed that my mother was suffering from COPD and severe dementia, and he also agreed to get the death certificate changed. This only happened because I challenged it.’
JESSIE, who separated from her husband when her five children were grown up, was much loved. She went on to become a grandmother of nine and a greatgrandmother of 16, which gave her much joy in later life.
‘I didn’t want my mother to become just another statistic,’ explained Mr Wylde. ‘The least she deserved was to have the right information included on her death certificate.’
her certificate now says that the cause of death was chronic pulmonary disease ( COPD) and dementia. The word ‘Covid’ was removed. The Wylde family are not alone; people nationwide, we now know, who have suffered bereavements during the pandemic have had a similar experience.
Their alarming testimonies have been forwarded to this newspaper following Bel Mooney’s moving account, in last Saturday’s Mail, of the death of her 99-year- old father in the early hours of February 9. he had passed three Covid tests but was still classed as one of Britain’s 120,000 Covid victims. When Bel questioned this, the care home doctor, she says, explained it was because there had been Covid fatalities on the same dementia floor.
More than 100 families contacted us in the aftermath of Bel’s report and, at the time of writing, letters were still coming in:
‘Dear Bel, I am writing to let you know that I had exactly the same experience when my mother sadly passed away’ . . . ‘Dear Bel, the same thing happened to my dad’ ... ‘Dear Bel, I had the same problems when my darling wife passed away.’
Among the ‘postbag’ were eight families, including the Wyldes, who managed to get the death certificate or a doctor’s medical certificate cause of death (MCCD) — containing the information needed to register a death — changed because they refused to accept that a loved one had died from Covid and challenged the clinical diagnosis.
Others said they had not pursued such a course of action because they didn’t want to exacerbate the grieving process.
Common sense tells us that these can’t be the only examples. But why is this happening? The reasons, are — as we shall explain
— as complex as the pandemic itself. Over- stretched doctors, anxious to do the right thing in an unprecedented situation where the recording of incidents of Covid is a legal requirement, would account for the most.
Also, of course, there’s human error, doctors’ questionable judgement and possibly those drawn towards the easiest and most convenient path when faced with impossible workloads.
But let’s make one thing absolutely clear: it is nonsense to suggest, as conspiracy theorists and virus deniers would have you believe, that doctors en masse are deliberately falsifying certificates to exaggerate the number of Covid deaths to justify behavioural and travel restrictions; in other words, that this all part of some government plot.
That said, the evidence that some deaths are being wrongly attributed to Covid, like for example, Jessie Wylde, is compelling.
So too are the accounts of families with elderly relatives who were already receiving end of life care suffering from, say, COPD, heart disease or cancer, when they contracted the virus; they had the virus, in other words, but, in the eyes of their families, they didn’t die from Covid but were still classified as Covid deaths.
In households across the country this alone has caused untold anguish, if the response to Bel Mooney’s article is anything to go by; for many families, rightly or wrongly, Covid is seen as a stigma — a ‘plague’ as Bel puts it — which has exacerbated their grief.
This is the hidden story behind the statistics; what the people who have been writing to the Mail in their droves over the past week are telling us.
It is why distinguished retired pathologist John Lee believes that he can ‘think of no time in my medical career when it has been more important to have accurate diagnosis of a disease and an understanding of precisely why patients have died of it.’
There is no accepted international standard of how you measure Covid deaths; trying to rank different countries to decide which is the worst in europe is, to quote one leading statistician, a ‘completely fatuous exercise’.
In Britain, there are two parallel reporting methods; two different sources of statistics.
ONE set compiled by Public health england (Phe) records the number of deaths of people who died within 28 days of a positive test result, which does not mean the person died of Covid — although it is likely they did — just that they died following a positive test.
These are the figures collated on the government’s Covid-19 dashboard — a way of keeping the public informed on a daily basis — which appear nightly on the TV news.
The most comprehensive figures, and the ones trusted by the medical establishment, are those published every week by the ONS (Office for National Statistics).
Dad did NOT die of Covid – but it’s on his death certificate
They reflect what doctors responsible for a patient in their final illness write on death certificates to the ‘best of [their] knowledge and belief’ whether the deceased has tested positive for Covid or not. One reason for this wording is that some studies have found that one in five swabs may give false negatives; so everything depends on the doctor.
It is the area which is causing the most controversy, especially in care homes, which account for a quarter of all Covid deaths.
One of the reasons is because the rules surrounding certifying a death have been relaxed during the pandemic.
In the past, the certifying doctor needed to be treating the patient or know them and have seen them recently. But during this emergency period, when doctors are under increasing pressure — or self-isolating — there is no requirement for them to have examined the patient. A video-link consultation in the four weeks prior to death (extended from 14 days) is now sufficient for a death to be attributed to Covid.
It was an on-call doctor, not the regular care home doctor, remember, who said Jessie Wylde died from Covid, a clinical decision which her family successfully challenged by having her death certificate changed.
‘ Doctors in this situation sometimes neither have the time or the necessary back-up to reach the right conclusion,’ said Daily Mail columnist Dr Martin Scurr, a former GP and consultant in palliative care.
‘They often have to rely on the reports of care home staff, many of whom do not have formal medical training. Inevitably, in these circumstances, certificates can be issued which look right but turn out to be wrong.’
And any reference to Covid on a death certificate, either directly as an underlying cause or as a contributory cause, and the death will be recorded as a Covid death in the ONS statistics.
Covid is a ‘notifiable disease’, and doctors have a legal duty to report any incidence of the virus.
Might this explain what the doctor at the care home in Wolverhampton, where Jessie Wylde died, meant when he was challenged by her son after discovering his mother was about to become ‘another statistic’?
‘Doctors are encouraged to put down Covid on death certificates,’ Mr Wylde was allegedly told, when the doctor tried to explain why she had been wrongly classed as a Covid victim.
It is hard not to avoid the suspicion that the default diagnosis of overstretched, under-pressure GPs is to mention Covid somewhere on the death certificate.
‘Death certification has never been a precise science,’ a recent article by a consultant in geriatrics and acute general medicine in the British Medical Journal reported.
The consultant said that ‘sometimes there is a cluster of simultaneous acute problems which we could easily switch as they all happened so close together and were all serious.’
FEW are better placed to offer an opinion on this matter than Stephen Johnston, a funeral director from Cumbria.
‘I have arranged funerals for quite a lot of people whose families have disputed Covid-19 being put down as the main cause of death when they don’t think it should have been,’ he said.
‘ In a number of cases, the deceased has gone into hospital already seriously ill from lifethreatening conditions, such as COPD, heart disease, kidney disease, liver failure and cancer, having had three or four negative Covid tests. While in hospital, they have had another test, which is positive, and then passed away and the death is recorded as Covid.
‘ I think families are upset because there is a little bit of stigma attached to a Covid death that people don’t like. They are more comfortable with very elderly family members passing away peacefully in their sleep.’
One of the families we spoke to was that of Tony ennos, 96, who was receiving end of life care when, two days before his death, he tested positive, which meant Covid went on the death certificate. ‘He died of heart failure, not Covid,’ his son Richard said.
David Brighouse, 72, was terminally ill with Multiple System Atrophy, a rare neurodegenerative disorder, but tested positive shortly before his death, which meant Covid went on the death certificate. ‘I feel strongly that Dad died of his existing illness,’ his daughter Julie said.
It was a similar story for David Sutcliffe, 81, who suffered from vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s, and had been clear of Covid for more than six months before he died last October. And publishing giant Naim Attallah, 89 — believed to be suffering from terminal cancer — whose death was nonetheless attributed to Covid when he died in February. His last test came back clear, and he’d even been vaccinated against the virus four weeks before his death.
The complexity of the different recording methods makes it difficult to estimate the scale of the shortcomings highlighted today.
What is undeniable is that record numbers of people have been dying since the pandemic began; this is not fake news.
But are the statistics always telling the whole truth?